Abstract
Biofilm formation represents a critical strategy whereby bacteria can tolerate otherwise damaging environmental stressors and antimicrobial insults. While the mechanisms bacteria use to establish a biofilm and disperse from these communities have been well-studied, we have only a limited understanding of the mechanisms required to maintain these multicellular communities. Indeed, until relatively recently, it was not clear that maintaining a mature biofilm could be considered an active, regulated process with dedicated machinery. Using Pseudomonas aeruginosa as a model system, we review evidence from recent studies that support the model that maintenance of these persistent, surface-attached communities is indeed an active process. Biofilm maintenance mechanisms include transcriptional regulation and second messenger signaling (including the production of extracellular polymeric substances). We also discuss energy-conserving pathways that play a key role in the maintenance of these communities. We hope to highlight the need for further investigation to uncover novel biofilm maintenance pathways and suggest the possibility that such pathways can serve as novel antibiofilm targets.
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