New publication by Nyongesa & Weber et al. in Nature Communications

24.07.2022

"Evolution of longitudinal division in multicellular bacteria of the Neisseriaceae family"

 

 

Congratulations to Sammy Nyongesa, Philipp M. Weber, Ève Bernet, Francisco Pulido, Cecilia Nieves, Marta Nieckarz, Marie Delaby, Tobias Viehböck, Nicole Krause, Alex Rivera-Millot, Arnaldo Nakamura, Norbert O. E. Vischer, Michael vanNieuwenhze, Yves V. Brun, Felipe Cava, Silvia Bulgheresi & Frédéric J. Veyrier on their new publication in Nature Communications:

 

Evolution of longitudinal division in multicellular bacteria of the Neisseriaceae family

Nyongese & Weber et al shed light on the evolution of multicellularity and longitudinal division in bacteria.

 

 

Full article: Evolution of longitudinal division in multicellular bacteria of the Neisseriaceae family | Nature Communications

 

Original paper:

Nature Communications, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-32260-w

Evolution of longitudinal division in multicellular bacteria of the Neisseriaceae family

Sammy Nyongesa, Philipp M. Weber, Ève Bernet, Francisco Pulido, Cecilia Nieves, Marta Nieckarz, Marie Delaby, Tobias Viehboeck, Nicole Krause, Alex Rivera-Millot, Arnaldo Nakamura, Norbert O. E. Vischer, Michael vanNieuwenhze, Yves V. Brun, Felipe Cava, Silvia Bulgheresi & Frédéric J. Veyrier

 

News coverage:

APA Science (22.08.2022): Spezielle Bakterien klammern sich in breiten Bändern im Mund an           

Labroots (25.09.2022): Understanding Oral Microbe Evolution, Which May Aid in the Hunt for Antibiotics

GMX (26.08.2022): Sieht aus wie eine Raupe: Dieser kleine Organismus lebt im menschlichen Mund

ASM Blog (7.11.2022): The Very Bacterial Caterpillar

Medienportal (22.08.2022): Caterpillar-like bacteria crawling in our mouth

Daily Mail UK (23.08.2022): This microscopic, caterpillar-shaped bacteria may be slithering around INSIDE your mouth because it seems to have evolved its shape in order to fit there, study reveals

Science alert (23.08.2022): This Caterpillar-Like Organism May Be Crawling Around in Your Mouth Right Now

Schrödingers Katze - Der Österreichische Wissenschaftsblog (1.12.2022): Raupenförmige Bakterien in unserem Mund

Fig. 1: Core genome-based phylogeny of rod-shaped, coccoid and MuLDi Neisseriaceae.

Philipp Weber

Nicole Krause

Silvia Bulgheresi