Bonnie Bassler On How Bacteria "Talk"
Susan notes: Thanks to TED for making TED Talks downloadable and embeddable, and for providing the biographical information that goes along with them.
Bonnie Bassler discovered that bacteria "talk" to each other, using a
chemical language that lets them coordinate defense and mount attacks.
The find has stunning implications for medicine, industry -- and our
understanding of ourselves.
In 2002, bearing her microscope on a microbe that lives in the gut of
fish, Bonnie Bassler isolated an elusive molecule called AI-2, and
uncovered the mechanism behind mysterious behavior called quorum
sensing -- or bacterial communication. She showed that bacterial
chatter is hardly exceptional or anomolous behavior, as was once
thought -- and in fact, most bacteria do it, and most do it all the
time. (She calls the signaling molecules "bacterial Esperanto.")
Bassler teaches molecular biology at Princeton, where she continues her years-long study of V. harveyi, one such social microbe that is mainly responsible for glow-in-the-dark sushi. She also teaches aerobics at the YMCA.
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