Bacterial cell shape

MT Cabeen, C Jacobs-Wagner - Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2005 - nature.com
MT Cabeen, C Jacobs-Wagner
Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2005nature.com
Bacterial species have long been classified on the basis of their characteristic cell shapes.
Despite intensive research, the molecular mechanisms underlying the generation and
maintenance of bacterial cell shape remain largely unresolved. The field has recently taken
an important step forward with the discovery that eukaryotic cytoskeletal proteins have
homologues in bacteria that affect cell shape. Here, we discuss how a bacterium gains and
maintains its shape, the challenges still confronting us and emerging strategies for …
Abstract
Bacterial species have long been classified on the basis of their characteristic cell shapes. Despite intensive research, the molecular mechanisms underlying the generation and maintenance of bacterial cell shape remain largely unresolved. The field has recently taken an important step forward with the discovery that eukaryotic cytoskeletal proteins have homologues in bacteria that affect cell shape. Here, we discuss how a bacterium gains and maintains its shape, the challenges still confronting us and emerging strategies for answering difficult questions in this rapidly evolving field.
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