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Articles in 2015

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  • Bacteria form biofilms as a strategy for survival and persistence. In this Review, Yildiz and colleagues discussVibrio cholerae surface attachment and the biofilm matrix components. They also review the regulatory network that governs V. choleraebiofilm formation, including the transcriptional regulators of key genes involved in this process, as well as the roles of small nucleotides and small RNAs.

    • Jennifer K. Teschler
    • David Zamorano-Sánchez
    • Fitnat H. Yildiz
    Review Article
  • This month's Genome Watch highlights how high-throughput sequencing has provided new insights into the diversity, evolution and genome organization of arthropod viruses.

    • Astrid Gall
    Genome Watch
  • Three new studies show that bacteria use selective transition metal-sensing riboswitches to balance the intracellular levels of potentially toxic metal ions.

    • Andrea Du Toit
    Research Highlight
  • In bacteria, ribosome stalling is a frequent event that threatens viability. In this Review, Kenneth Keiler discusses the triggers of ribosome stalling, the physiological consequences of stalling and the mechanisms used by bacteria to rescue stalled ribosomes, includingtrans-translation and the alternative pathways mediated by alternative ribosome-rescue factor A (ArfA) and ArfB.

    • Kenneth C. Keiler
    Review Article
  • A new study shows how altering the levels of quorum sensing signals can modulate the composition of the antibiotic-treated gut microbiota.

    • Cláudio Nunes-Alves
    Research Highlight
  • A metabolic bifurcation point functions as a bistable switch that results in phenotypic switching in aPseudomonas fluorescenspopulation.

    • Naomi Attar
    Research Highlight
  • Urinary tract infections (UTIs) pose a severe public health problem and are caused by a range of pathogens. In this Review, Hultgren and colleagues discuss how basic science studies are elucidating the molecular mechanisms of UTI pathogenesis and how this knowledge is being used for the development of novel clinical treatments for UTIs.

    • Ana L. Flores-Mireles
    • Jennifer N. Walker
    • Scott J. Hultgren
    Review Article
  • In this Review, Gerdes and colleagues discuss the multifaceted alarmones guanosine tetraphosphate and guanosine pentaphosphate (collectively referred to as (p)ppGpp) and their functions in the regulation of bacterial physiology, including their synthesis and degradation, as well as their role in transcriptional regulation, in GTP biosynthesis and in the formation of bacterial persisters.

    • Vasili Hauryliuk
    • Gemma C. Atkinson
    • Kenn Gerdes
    Review Article
  • Antibiotic resistance constitutes a threat to human and animal health worldwide. Here, Manaia and colleagues report the main findings of the European COST (Cooperation in Science and Technology) Action DARE (Detecting Evolutionary Hotspots of Antibiotic Resistance in Europe) and discuss the need for improved sampling of the environment and more comprehensive databases, as well as the policy and management options that should be considered as priorities to tackle antibiotic resistance in the environment.

    • Thomas U. Berendonk
    • Célia M. Manaia
    • José Luis Martinez
    Opinion
  • A new study shows that that an unusual bipartite centrosome structure coordinates replication and cytokinesis in apicomplexan parasites.

    • Naomi Attar
    Research Highlight
  • A new study finds that HIV-1 preferentially integrates into regions of chromatin that are proximal to nuclear pores.

    • Naomi Attar
    Research Highlight

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