Utilization and control of ecological interactions in polymicrobial infections and community-based microbial cell factories

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Abstract

Microbial activities are most often shaped by interactions between co-existing microbes within mixed-species communities. Dissection of the molecular mechanisms of species interactions within communities is a central issue in microbial ecology, and our ability to engineer and control microbial communities depends, to a large extent, on our knowledge of these interactions. This review highlights the recent advances regarding molecular characterization of microbe-microbe interactions that modulate community structure, activity, and stability, and aims to illustrate how these findings have helped us reach an engineering-level understanding of microbial communities in relation to both human health and industrial biotechnology.

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Jelsbak, L., Wigneswaran, V., Amador, C. I., Jelsbak, L., & Sternberg, C. (2016). Utilization and control of ecological interactions in polymicrobial infections and community-based microbial cell factories. F1000Research, 5, 1. https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.7876.1

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