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Fifty years of research has transformed our understanding of bacterial movement from one of description, based on a limited number of electron micrographs and some low-magnification studies of cells moving towards or away from chemical effectors, to probably the best understood behavioural system in biology. We have a molecular understanding of how bacteria sense and respond to changes in their environment and detailed structural insights into the workings of one of the most complex motor structures we know of. Thanks to advances in genomics we also understand how, through evolution, different species have tuned and adapted a core shared system to optimize behaviour in their specific environment. In this review, I will highlight some of the unexpected findings we made during my over 40-year career, how those findings changed some of our understanding of bacterial behaviour and biochemistry and some of the battles to have those observations accepted.

Original publication

DOI

10.1099/mic.0.001432

Type

Journal article

Journal

Microbiology (Reading)

Publication Date

02/2024

Volume

170

Keywords

Rhodobacter, chemotaxis, memoir, motility, swimming, Chemotaxis, Bacteria, Flagella, Movement