Contact-dependent growth inhibition (CDI) through a two-component system was first described in Escherichia coli as a mechanism to inhibit growth of bacterial cells that do not possess this system. Now the widespread occurrence of CDI in bacteria and the molecular basis for some of these interactions have been elucidated. The data suggest that CDI is a common mechanism by which microbes compete with each other in the environment.
- Stephanie K. Aoki
- Elie J. Diner
- David A. Low