Abstract
Over 50 years ago, standard microbiological methods were established for determining whether bacterial cells were dead or alive. Recently there has been a flurry of reports suggesting that bacteria may exist in an eclipsed state, escaping detection by standard methods. Whether there really is such a state is of more than academic interest, considering the implications for public health. The ensuing debate has been unusually energetic for the normally cultured community of microbiologists.
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CITATION STYLE
Bogosian, G., & Bourneuf, E. V. (2001). A matter of bacterial life and death. EMBO Reports, 2(9), 770–774. https://doi.org/10.1093/embo-reports/kve182
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