Although bacteria frequently live as unicellular organisms, many spend
at least part of their lives in complex communities, and some have
adopted truly multicellular lifestyles and have abandoned unicellular
growth. These transitions to multicellularity have occurred
independently several times for various ecological reasons, resulting in
a broad range of phenotypes. In this Review, we discuss the strategies
that are used by bacteria to form and grow in multicellular structures
that have hallmark features of multicellularity, including morphological
differentiation, programmed cell death and patterning. In addition, we
examine the evolutionary and ecological factors that lead to the wide
range of coordinated multicellular behaviours that are observed in
bacteria.
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