TY - JOUR
T1 - Resolving spatiotemporal dynamics in bacterial multicellular populations
T2 - approaches and challenges
AU - Miranda, Suyen Solange Espinoza
AU - Abbaszade, Gorkhmaz
AU - Hess, Wolfgang R.
AU - Drescher, Knut
AU - Saliba, Antoine Emmanuel
AU - Zaburdaev, Vasily
AU - Chai, Liraz
AU - Dreisewerd, Klaus
AU - Grünberger, Alexander
AU - Westendorf, Christian
AU - Müller, Susann
AU - Mascher, Thorsten
N1 - Publisher Copyright: Copyright © 2025 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - SUMMARY The development of multicellularity represents a key evolutionary transition that is crucial for the emergence of complex life forms. Although multicellularity has traditionally been studied in eukaryotes, it originates in prokaryotes. Coordinated aggregation of individual cells within the confines of a colony results in emerging, higher-level functions that benefit the population as a whole. During colony differentiation, an almost infinite number of ecological and physiological population-forming forces are at work, creating complex, intricate colony structures with divergent functions. Understanding the assembly and dynamics of such populations requires resolving individual cells or cell groups within such macroscopic structures. Addressing how each cell contributes to the collective action requires pushing the resolution boundaries of key technologies that will be presented in this review. In particular, single-cell techniques provide powerful tools for studying bacterial multicellularity with unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution. These advancements include novel microscopic techniques, mass spectrometry imaging, flow cytometry, spatial transcriptomics, single-bacteria RNA sequencing, and the integration of spatiotemporal transcriptomics with microscopy, alongside advanced microfluidic cultivation systems. This review encourages exploring the synergistic potential of the new technologies in the study of bacterial multicellularity, with a particular focus on individuals in differentiated bacterial biofilms (colonies). It highlights how resolving population structures at the single-cell level and understanding their respective functions can elucidate the overarching functions of bacterial multicellular populations.
AB - SUMMARY The development of multicellularity represents a key evolutionary transition that is crucial for the emergence of complex life forms. Although multicellularity has traditionally been studied in eukaryotes, it originates in prokaryotes. Coordinated aggregation of individual cells within the confines of a colony results in emerging, higher-level functions that benefit the population as a whole. During colony differentiation, an almost infinite number of ecological and physiological population-forming forces are at work, creating complex, intricate colony structures with divergent functions. Understanding the assembly and dynamics of such populations requires resolving individual cells or cell groups within such macroscopic structures. Addressing how each cell contributes to the collective action requires pushing the resolution boundaries of key technologies that will be presented in this review. In particular, single-cell techniques provide powerful tools for studying bacterial multicellularity with unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution. These advancements include novel microscopic techniques, mass spectrometry imaging, flow cytometry, spatial transcriptomics, single-bacteria RNA sequencing, and the integration of spatiotemporal transcriptomics with microscopy, alongside advanced microfluidic cultivation systems. This review encourages exploring the synergistic potential of the new technologies in the study of bacterial multicellularity, with a particular focus on individuals in differentiated bacterial biofilms (colonies). It highlights how resolving population structures at the single-cell level and understanding their respective functions can elucidate the overarching functions of bacterial multicellular populations.
KW - cell differentiation
KW - microbial multicellularity
KW - phenotypic heterogeneity
KW - population dynamics
KW - population ecology
KW - single-cell technologies
KW - single-cell transcriptomics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105001700882&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1128/mmbr.00138-24
DO - 10.1128/mmbr.00138-24
M3 - مقالة مرجعية
C2 - 39853129
SN - 1092-2172
VL - 89
JO - Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews
JF - Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews
IS - 1
ER -