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Yeast biofilm colony as an orchestrated multicellular organism

Although still often considered as simple unicellular organisms, in natural settings yeast cells tend to organize into intricate multicellular communities. Due to specific mechanisms only feasible at the population level, their capacity for social behavior is advantageous for their survival in a har...

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Published in:Communicative & integrative biology 2012-03, Vol.5 (2), p.203-205
Main Authors: Šťovíček, Vratislav, Váchová, Libuše, Palková, Zdena
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c3472-73884e6c97900faa141a8fac3989dfb75a829a663ce366800a9c4db4c42c129b3
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container_title Communicative & integrative biology
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creator Šťovíček, Vratislav
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description Although still often considered as simple unicellular organisms, in natural settings yeast cells tend to organize into intricate multicellular communities. Due to specific mechanisms only feasible at the population level, their capacity for social behavior is advantageous for their survival in a harmful environment. Feral Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains form complex structured colonies, which display many properties typical of natural biofilms causing (among others) serious infections in the human body. In our recent paper, we looked inside a growing colony using two-photon confocal microscopy. This allowed us to elucidate its three-dimensional colony architecture and some mechanisms responsible for community protection. Moreover, we showed how particular protective mechanisms complement each other during colony development and how each of them contributes to its defense against attacks from the environment. Our findings broaden current understanding of microbial multicellularity in general and also shed new light on the enormous resistance of yeast biofilms.
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1942-0889
language eng
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subjects Addendum
Binding
biofilm
Biology
Bioscience
Calcium
Cancer
Cell
Cycle
drug efflux pumps
extracellular matrix
feral strains
Landes
Organogenesis
Proteins
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
structured colony
title Yeast biofilm colony as an orchestrated multicellular organism
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