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Bacteria in various habitats are subject to continuously changing environmental conditions, such as nutrient deprivation, heat and cold stress, UV radiation, oxidative stress, dessication, acid stress, nitrosative stress, cell envelope stress, heavy metal exposure, osmotic stress, and others. In order to survive, they have to respond to these conditions by adapting their physiology through sometimes drastic changes in gene expression. In addition they may adapt by changing their morphology, forming biofilms, fruiting bodies or spores, filaments, Viable But Not Culturable (VBNC) cells or moving away from stress compounds via chemotaxis. Changes in gene expression constitute the main component of the bacterial response to stress and environmental changes, and involve a myriad of different mechanisms, including (alternative) sigma factors, bi- or tri-component regulatory systems, small non-coding RNA’s, chaperones, CHRIS-Cas systems, DNA repair, toxin-antitoxin systems, the stringent response, efflux pumps, alarmones, and modulation of the cell envelope or membranes, to name a few. Many regulatory elements are conserved in different bacteria; however there are endless variations on the theme and novel elements of gene regulation in bacteria inhabiting particular environments are constantly being discovered. Especially in (pathogenic) bacteria colonizing the human body a plethora of bacterial responses to innate stresses such as pH, reactive nitrogen and oxygen species and antibiotic stress are being described. An attempt is made to not only cover model systems but give a broad overview of the stress-responsive regulatory systems in a variety of bacteria, including medically important bacteria, where elucidation of certain aspects of these systems could lead to treatment strategies of the pathogens. Many of the regulatory systems being uncovered are specific, but there is also considerable “cross-talk” between different circuits.
Stress and Environmental Regulation of Gene Expression and Adaptation in Bacteria is a comprehensive two-volume work bringing together both review and original research articles on key topics in stress and environmental control of gene expression in bacteria.
Volume One contains key overview chapters, as well as content on one/two/three component regulatory systems and stress responses, sigma factors and stress responses, small non-coding RNAs and stress responses, toxin-antitoxin systems and stress responses, stringent response to stress, responses to UV irradiation, SOS and double stranded systems repair systems and stress, adaptation to both oxidative and osmotic stress, and desiccation tolerance and drought stress.
	Volume Two covers heat shock responses, chaperonins and stress, cold shock responses, adaptation to acid stress, nitrosative stress, and envelope stress, as well as iron homeostasis, metal resistance, quorum sensing, chemotaxis and biofilm formation, and viable but not culturable (VBNC) cells.
	
	Covering the full breadth of current stress and environmental control of gene expression studies and expanding it towards future advances in the field, these two volumes are a one-stop reference for (non) medical molecular geneticists interested in gene regulation under stress.
VOLUME 1
Preface, xiii
Acknowledgements, xiv
List of contributors, xv
			1 Introduction, 1
			Frans J. de Bruijn
Section 2: Key overview chapters, 3
			2.1 Stress-induced changes in transcript stability, 5
			Dvora Biran and Eliora Z. Ron
			2.2 StressChip for monitoring microbial stress response in the environment, 9
			Joy D. Van Nostrand, Aifen Zhou and Jizhong Zhou
			2.3 A revolutionary paradigm of bacterial genome regulation, 23
			Akira Ishihama
			2.4 Role of changes in σ70-driven transcription in adaptation of E. coli to conditions of stress or starvation, 37
			Umender K. Sharma
			2.5 The distribution and spatial organization of RNA polymerase in Escherichia coli: growth rate regulation and stress responses, 48
			Ding Jun Jin, Cedric Cagliero, Jerome Izard, Carmen Mata Martin, and Yan Ning Zhou
			2.6 The ECF classification: a phylogenetic reflection of the regulatory diversity in the extracytoplasmic function σ factor protein family, 64
			Daniela Pinto andThorsten Mascher
			2.7 Toxin–antitoxin systems in bacteria and archaea, 97
			Yoshihiro Yamaguchi and Masayori Inouye
			2.8 Bacterial sRNAs: regulation in stress, 108
			Marimuthu Citartan, Carsten A. Raabe, Chee-Hock Hoe, Timofey S. Rozhdestvensky, andThean-Hock Tang
			2.9 Bacterial stress responses as determinants of antimicrobial resistance, 115
			Michael Fruci and Keith Poole
			2.10 Transposable elements: a toolkit for stress and environmental adaptation in bacteria, 137
			Anna Ullastres, Miriam Merenciano, Lain Guio, and Josefa González
			2.11 CRISPR–Cas system: a new paradigm for bacterial stress response through genome rearrangement, 146
			Joseph A. Hakim, Hyunmin Koo, Jan D. van Elsas, Jack T. Trevors, and Asim K. Bej
			2.12 The copper metallome in prokaryotic cells, 161
			Christopher Rensing, Hend A. Alwathnani, and Sylvia F. McDevitt
			2.13 Ribonucleases as modulators of bacterial stress response, 174
			Cátia Bárria, Vánia Pobre, Afonso M. Bravo, and Cecília M. Arraiano
			2.14 Double-strand-break repair, mutagenesis, and stress, 185
			Elizabeth Rogers, Raul Correa, Brittany Barreto, María Angélica Bravo Núñez, P.J. Minnick, Diana Vera Cruz, Jun Xia, P.J. Hastings, and Susan M. Rosenberg
			2.15 Sigma factor competition in Escherichia coli: kinetic and thermodynamic perspectives, 196
			Kuldeepkumar Ramnaresh Gupta and Dipankar Chatterji
			2.16 Iron homeostasis and iron–sulfur cluster assembly in Escherichia coli, 203
			Huangen Ding
			2.17 Mechanisms underlying the antimicrobial capacity of metals, 215
			Joe A. Lemire and Raymond J. Turner
			2.18 Acyl-homoserine lactone-based quorum sensing in members of the marine bacterial Roseobacter clade: complex cell-to-cell communication controls multiple physiologies, 225
			Alison Buchan, April Mitchell,W. Nathan Cude, and Shawn Campagna
			2.19 Native and synthetic gene regulation to nitrogen limitation stress, 234
			J örg Schumacher
Section 3: One-, two-, and three-component regulatory systems and stress responses, 247
			3.1 Two-component systems that control the expression of aromatic hydrocarbon degradation pathways, 249
			Tino Krell
			3.2 Cross-talk of global regulators in Streptomyces, 257
			Juan F. Martín, Fernando Santos-Beneit, Alberto Sola-Landa, and Paloma Liras
			3.3 NO–H-NOX-regulated two-component signaling, 268
			Dhruv P. Arora, Sandhya Muralidharan, and Elizabeth M. Boon
			3.4 The two-component CheY system in the chemotaxis of Sinorhizobium meliloti, 277
			Martin Haslbeck
			3.5 Stimulus perception by histidine kinases, 282
			Hannah Schramke, Yang Wang, Ralf Heermann, and Kirsten Jung
Section 4: Sigma factors and stress responses, 301
			4.1 The extracytoplasmic function sigma factor EcfO protects Bacteroides fragilis against oxidative stress, 303
			Ivan C. Ndamukong, Samantha Palethorpe, Michael Betteken, and C. Jeffrey Smith
			4.2 Regulation of energy metabolism by the extracytoplasmic function (ECF) σ factors of Arcobacter butzleri, 311
			Irati Martinez-Malaxetxebarria, Rudy Muts, Linda van Dijk, Craig T. Parker, William G. Miller, Steven Huynh,Wim Gaastra, Jos P.M. van Putten, Aurora Fernandez-Astorga, and Marc M.S.M Wösten
			4.3 Extracytoplasmic function sigma factors and stress responses in Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis, 321
			Thiago L.P. Castro, Nubia Seyffert, Anne C. Pinto, Artur Silva, Vasco Azevedo, and Luis G.C. Pacheco
			4.4 The complex roles and regulation of stress response σ factors in Streptomyces coelicolor, 328
			Jan Kormanec, Beatrica Sevcikova, Renata Novakova, Dagmar Homerova, Bronislava Rezuchova, and Erik Mingyar
			4.5 Proteolytic activation of extra cytoplasmic function (ECF) σ factors, 344
			JessicaL. Hastie and Craig D. Ellermeier
			4.6 The ECF family sigma factor σH in Corynebacterium glutamicum controls the thiol-oxidative stress response, 352
			Tobias Busche and Jörn Kalinowski
			4.7 Posttranslational regulation of antisigma factors of RpoE: a comparison between the Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa systems, 361
			Sundar Pandey, Kyle L. Martins, and Kalai Mathee
Section 5: Small noncoding RNAs and stress responses, 369
			5.1 Bacterial small RNAs in mixed regulatory circuits, 371
			Jonathan Jagodnik, DenisThieffry, and Maude Guillier
			5.2 Role of small RNAs in Pseudomonas aeruginosa virulence and adaptation, 383
			Hansi Kumari, Deepak Balasubramanian, and Kalai Mathee
			5.3 Physiological effects of posttranscriptional regulation by the small RNA SgrS during metabolic stress in
			Escherichia coli, 393
			Gregory R. Richards
			5.4 Three rpoS-activating small RNAs in pathways contributing to acid resistance of Escherichia coli, 402
			Geunu Bak, Kook Han, Daun Kim, Kwang-sun Kim, and Younghoon Lee
			5.5 Thermal stress noncoding RNAs in prokaryotes and eukaryotes: a comparative approach, 412
			Mercedes de la Fuente and José Luis Martínez-Guitarte
Section 6: Toxin-antitoxin systems and stress responses, 423
			6.1 Epigenetics mediated by restriction modification systems, 425
			Iwona Mruk and Ichizo Kobayashi
			6.2 Toxin–antitoxin systems as regulators of bacterial fitness and virulence, 437
			Brittany A. Fleming and Matthew A. Mulvey
			6.3 Mechanisms of stress-activated persister formation in Escherichia coli, 446
			Stephanie M. Amato and Mark P. Brynildsen
			6.4 Identification and characterization of type II toxin–antitoxin systems in the opportunistic pathogen
			Acinetobacter baumannii, 454
			Edita Sûziedéliené, Milda Jurénaité, and Julija Armalyté
			6.5 Transcriptional control of toxin–antitoxin expression: keeping toxins under wraps until the time is right, 463
			Barbara Kℷedzierska and Finbarr Hayes
			6.6 Opposite effects of GraT toxin on stress tolerance of Pseudomonas putida, 473
			Rita Hõrak and Hedvig Tamman
Section 7: Stringent response to stress, 479
			7.1 Preferential cellular accumulation of ppGpp or pppGpp in Escherichia coli, 481
			K. Potrykus and M. Cashel
			7.2 Global Rsh-dependent transcription profile of Brucella suis during stringent response unravels adaptation to nutrient starvation and cross-talk with other stress responses, 489
			Stephan Köhler, Nabil Hanna, Safia Ouahrani-Bettache, Kenneth L. Drake, L. Garry Adams, and Alessandra Occhialini
			7.3 The stringent response and antioxidant defences in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, 500
			Gowthami Sampathkumar, Malika Khakimova, Tevy Chan, and Dao Nguyen
			7.4 Molecular basis of the stringent response in Vibrio cholerae, 507
			Shreya Dasgupta, Bhabatosh Das, Pallabi Basu, and Rupak K. Bhadra
Section 8: Responses to UV irradiation, 517
			8.1 UV stress-responsive genes associated with ICE SXT/R391 group, 519
			Patricia Armshaw and J. Tony Pembroke
			8.2 Altered outer membrane proteins in response to UVC radiation in Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Vibrio alginolyticus, 528
			Fethi Ben Abdallah
			8.3 Ultraviolet-B radiation effects on the community, physiology, and mineralization of magnetotactic bacteria, 532
			Yingzhao Wang and Yongxin Pan
			8.4 Nucleotide excision repair system and gene expression in Mycobacterium smegmatis, 545
			Angelina Cordone
Section 9: SOS and double stranded repair systems and stress, 551
			9.1 The SOS response modulates bacterial pathogenesis, 553
			Darja ¢§Zgur Bertok
			9.2 RNAP secondary-channel interactors in Escherichia coli: makers and breakers of genome stability, 561
			Priya Sivaramakrishnan and Christophe Herman
			9.3 How a large gene network couples mutagenic DNA break repair to stress in Escherichia coli, 570
			Elizabeth Rogers, P.J. Hastings, María Angélica Bravo Núñez, and Susan M. Rosenberg
			9.4 Double-strand DNA break repair in mycobacteria, 577
			Richa Gupta and Michael S. Glickman
Section 10: Adaptation to oxidative stress, 587
			10.1 Peroxide-sensing transcriptional regulators in bacteria, 58
			James M. Dubbs and Skorn Mongkolsuk
			10.2 Regulation of oxidative stress–related genes implicated in the establishment of opportunistic infections by Bacteroides fragilis, 603
			Felipe Lopes Teixeira, Regina Maria Cavalcanti Pilotto Domingues, and Leandro Araujo Lobo
			10.3 Investigation into oxidative stress response of Shewanella oneidensis reveals a distinct mechanism, 609
			Jie Yuan, Fen Wan, and Haichun Gao
			10.4 An omics view on the response to singlet oxygen, 619
			Bork A. Berghoff and Gabriele Klug
			10.5 Regulators of oxidative stress response genes in Escherichia coli and their conservation in bacteria, 632
			Herb E. Schellhorn, Mohammad Mohiuddin, Sarah M. Hammond, and Steven Botts
			10.6 Hydrogen peroxide resistance in Bifidobacterium animalis subsp. lactis and Bifidobacterium longum, 638
			Taylor S. Oberg and Jeff R. Broadbent
Section 11: Adaptation to osmotic stress, 647
			11.1 Interstrain variation in the physiological and transcriptional responses of Pseudomonas syringae to osmotic stress, 649
			Gwyn A. Beattie, Chiliang Chen, Lindsey Nielsen, and Brian C. Freeman
			11.2 Management of osmotic stress by Bacillus subtilis: genetics and physiology, 657
			Tamara Hoffmann and Erhard Bremer
			11.3 Hyperosmotic response of Streptococcus mutans: from microscopic physiology to transcriptomic profile, 677
			Lu Wang and Xin Xu
			11.4 Defective ribosome maturation or function makes Escherichia coli cells salt-resistant, 687
			Hyouta Himeno, Takefusa Tarusawa, Shion Ito, and Simon Goto
Section 12: Dessication tolerance and drought stress, 693
			12.1 Consequences of elevated salt concentrations on expression profiles in the rhizobium S. meliloti 1021 likely involved in heat and desiccation stress, 695
			Jan A.C. Vriezen, Caroline M. Finn, and Klaus Nüsslein
			12.2 Genes involved in the formation of desiccationresistant cysts in Azotobacter vinelandii, 709
			Guadalupe Espín
			12.3 Osmotic and desiccation tolerance in Escherichia coli O157:H7 and Salmonella enterica requires rpoS (σ38), 716
			Zach Pratt, Megan Shiroda, Andrew J. Stasic, Josh Lensmire, and C.W. Kaspar
			12.4 Desiccation of Salmonella enterica induces cross-tolerance to other stresses, 725
			Shlomo Sela (Saldinger) and Chellaiah Edward Raja
Index, i1
VOLUME 2
Preface, xiii
Acknowledgements, xiv
List of contributors, xv
Section 13: Heat shock responses, 737
			13.1 Heat shock response in bacteria with large genomes: lessons from rhizobia, 739
			Ana Alexandre and Solange Oliveira
			13.2 Small heat shock proteins in bacteria, 747
			Martin Haslbeck
			13.3 Transcriptome analysis of bacterial response to heat shock using next-generation sequencing, 754
			Kok-Gan Chan
			13.4 Comparative analyses of bacterial transcriptome reorganisation in response to temperature increase, 757
			Bei-Wen Ying and Tetsuya Yomo
			13.5 Participation of Ser–Thr protein kinases in regulation of heat stress responses in Synechocystis, 766
			Anna A. Zorina, Galina V. Novikova, and Dmitry A. Los
Section 14: Chaperonins and stress, 781
			14.1 GroEL/ES chaperonin: unfolding and refolding reactions, 783
			Victor V. Marchenkov, Nataliya A. Ryabova, Olga M. Selivanova, and Gennady V. Semisotnov
			14.2 Functional comparison between the DnaK chaperone systems of Streptococcus intermedius and Escherichia coli, 791
			Toshifumi Tomoyasu and Hideaki Nagamune
			14.3 Coevolution analysis illuminates the evolutionary plasticity of the chaperonin system GroES/L, 796
			Mario A. Fares
			14.4 ClpL ATPase: a novel chaperone in bacterial stress responses, 812
			Pratick Khara and Indranil Biswas
			14.5 Duplicated groEL genes inMyxococcus xanthus DK1622, 820
			Yan Wang, Xiao-jing Chen, and Yue-zhong Li
Section 15: Cold shock responses, 827
			15.1 Gene regulation by cold shock proteins via transcription antitermination, 829
			Sangita Phadtare and Konstantin Severinov
			15.2 Metagenomic analysis of microbial cold stress proteins in polar lacustrine ecosystems, 837
			Hyunmin Koo, Joseph A. Hakim, and Asim K. Bej
			15.3 Role of two-component systems in cold tolerance of Clostridium botulinum, 845
			Yâgmur Derman, Elias Dahlsten, and Hannu Korkeala
			15.4 Cold shock CspA protein production during periodic temperature cycling in Escherichia coli, 854
			David Stopar and Tina Ivancic
			15.5 Cold shock response in Escherichia coli: a model system to study posttranscriptional regulation, 859
			Anna Maria Giuliodori
			15.6 New insight into cold shock proteins: RNA-binding proteins involved in stress response and virulence, 873
			Charlotte Michaux and Jean-Christophe Giard
			15.7 Light regulation of cold stress responses in Synechocystis, 881
			Kirill S. Mironov and Dmitry A. Los
			15.8 Escherichia coli cold shock gene profiles in response to overexpression or deletion of CsdA, RNase R, and
			PNPase and relevance to low-temperature RNA metabolism, 890
			Sangita Phadtare
Section 16: Adaptation to acid stress, 897
			16.1 Acid-adaptive responses of Streptococcus mutans, and mechanisms of integration with oxidative stress, 899
			Robert G. Quivey Jr., Roberta C. Faustoferri, Brendaliz Santiago, Jonathon Baker, Benjamin Cross, and Jin Xiao
			16.2 Acid survival mechanisms in neutralophilic bacteria, 911
			Eugenia Pennacchietti, Fabio Giovannercole, and Daniela De Biase
			16.3 Two-component systems in sensing and adapting to acid stress in Escherichia coli, 927
			Yoko Eguchi and Ryutaro Utsumi
			16.4 Slr1909, a novel two-component response regulator involved in acid tolerance in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, 935
			Lei Chen, Qiang Ren, Jiangxin Wang, and Weiwen Zhang
			16.5 Comparative mass spectrometry–based proteomics to elucidate the acid stress response in Lactobacillus
			plantarum, 944
			Tiaan Heunis, Shelly Deane, and Leon M.T. Dicks
			Section 17: Adaptation to nitrosative stress, 953
			
			17.1 Transcriptional regulation by thiol-based sensors of oxidative and nitrosative stress, 955
			Timothy Tapscott, Matthew A. Crawford, and Andr´es Vázquez-Torres
			17.2 Haemoglobins of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and their involvement in management of environmental stress, 967
			Kanak L. Dikshit
			17.3 What is it about NO that you don’t understand? The role of heme and HcpR in Porphyromonas gingivalis’s response to nitrate (NO3), nitrite (NO2), and nitric oxide (NO), 976
			Janina P. Lewis and Benjamin R. Belvin
			17.4 Di-iron RICs: players in nitrosative-oxidative stress defences, 989
			Lígia S. Nobre and Lí¥gia M. Saraiva
			17.5 The Vibrio cholerae stress response: an elaborate system geared toward overcoming host defenses during infection, 997
			Karl-Gustav Rueggeberg and Jun Zhu
			17.6 Ensemble modeling enables quantitative exploration of bacterial nitric oxide stress networks, 1009
			Jonathan L. Robinson and Mark P. Brynildsen
Section 18: Adaptation to cell envelope stress, 1015
			18.1 The Cpx inner membrane stress response, 1017
			Randi L. Guest and Tracy L. Raivio
			18.2 New insights into stimulus detection and signal propagation by the Cpx-envelope stress system, 1025
			Patrick Hoernschemeyer and Sabine Hunke
			18.3 Promiscuous functions of cell envelope stress-sensing systems in Klebsiella pneumoniae and Acinetobacter
			baumannii, 1031
			Vijaya Bharathi Srinivasan and Govindan Rajamohan
			18.4 Influence of BrpA and Psr on cell envelope homeostasis and virulence of Streptococcus mutans, 1043
			Zezhang T.Wen, Jacob P. Bitoun, Sumei Liao, and Jacqueline Abranches
			18.5 Modulators of the bacterial two-component systems involved in envelope stress, transport, and virulence, 1055
			Rajeev Misra
Section 19: Iron homeostasis, 1065
			19.1 Iron homeostasis and environmental responses in cyanobacteria: regulatory networks involving Fur, 1067
			María Luisa Peleato, María Teresa Bes, and María F. Fillat
			19.2 Interplay between O2 and iron in gene expression: environmental sensing by FNR, ArcA, and Fur in bacteria, 1079
			Bryan Troxell and Hosni M. Hassan
			19.3 The iron–sulfur cluster biosynthesis regulator IscR contributes to iron homeostasis and resistance to
			oxidants in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, 1090
			Adisak Romsang, James M. Dubbs, and Skorn Mongkolsuk
			19.4 Transcriptional analysis of iron-responsive regulatory networks in Caulobacter crescentus, 1103
			José F. da Silva Neto
			19.5 Protein–protein interactions regulate the release of iron stored in bacterioferritin, 1109
			Huili Yao, YanWang, and Mario Rivera
			19.6 Protein dynamics and ion traffic in bacterioferritin function: a molecular dynamics simulation study on
			wild-type and mutant Pseudomonas aeruginosa BfrB, 1118
			Huan Rui, Mario Rivera, and Wonpil Im
Section 20: Metal resistance, 1131
			20.1 Nickel toxicity, regulation, and resistance in bacteria, 1133
			Lee Macomber and Robert P. Hausinger
			20.2 Metabolic networks to counter Al toxicity in Pseudomonas fluorescens: a holistic view, 1145
			Christopher Auger, Nishma D. Appanna, and Vasu D. Appanna
			20.3 Genomics of the resistance to metal and oxidative stresses in cyanobacteria, 1154
			Corinne Cassier-Chauvat and Franck Chauvat
			20.4 Cross-species transcriptional network analysis reveals conservation and variation in response to metal stress in cyanobacteria, 1165
			Jiangxin Wang, Gang Wu, Lei Chen, and Weiwen Zhang
			20.5 The extracytoplasmic function sigma factor–mediated response to heavy metal stress in Caulobacter crescentus, 1171
			Rogério F. Lourenco and Suely L. Gomes
			20.6 Metal ion toxicity and oxidative stress in Streptococcus pneumoniae, 1184
			Christopher A. McDevitt, Stephanie L. Begg, and James C. Paton
Section 21: Quorum sensing, 1195
			21.1 Quorum sensing and bacterial social interactions in biofilms: bacterial cooperation and competition, 1197
			Yung-Hua Li and Xiao-Lin Tian
			21.2 Recent advances in bacterial quorum quenching, 1206
			Kok-Gan Chan, Wai-Fong Yin, and Kar-Wai Hong
			21.3 LuxR-type quorum-sensing regulators that are antagonized by cognate pheromones, 1221
			Stephen C. Winans, Ching-Sung Tsai, Gina T. Ryan, Ana Lidia Flores-Mireles, Esther Costa, Kevin Y. Shih, Thomas C.Winans, Youngchang Kim, Robert Jedrzejczak, and Gekleng Chhor
			21.4 Adaptation to environmental stresses in Streptococcus mutans through the production of its quorum-sensing peptide pheromone, 1232
			Delphine Dufour, Vincent Leung, and Céline M. Lévesque
			21.5 Quorum sensing in Bacillus cereus in relation to cysteine metabolism and the oxidative stress response, 1242
			Eugénie Huillet and Michel Gohar
Section 22: Chemotaxis and biofilm formation, 1253
			22.1 The flagellum as a sensor, 1255
			Rasika M. Harshey
			22.2 Flagellar motility and fitness in xanthomonads, 1265
			Marie-Agnès Jacques, Jean-Françis Guimbaud, Martial Briand, Arnaud Indiana, and Armelle Darrasse
			22.3 Understanding Listeriamonocytogenes biofilms: perspectives into mechanisms of adaptation and regulation under stress conditions, 1274
			Lizziane Kretli Winkelströter, Fernanda Barbosa dos Reis-Teixeira, Gabriela Satti Lameu, and Elaine Cristina Pereira De Martinis
			22.4 Biofilm formation and environmental signals in Bordetella, 1279
			Tomoko Hanawa
			22.5 Biofilm formation by rhizobacteria in response to water-limiting conditions, 1287
			Pablo Bogino, Fiorela Nievas, and Walter Giordano
			22.6 Stress conditions triggering mucoid-to-nonmucoid morphotype variation in Burkholderia, and effects on
			virulence and biofilm formation, 1295
			Leonilde M. Moreira, Inês N. Silva, Ana S. Ferreira, and Mário R. Santos
			22.7 Effect of environmental conditions present in the fishery industry on the biofilm-forming ability of Staphylococcus aureus, 1304
			Daniel Vázquez-Sánchez
			22.8 Biofilm development and stress response in the cholera bacterium, 1310
			Anisia J. Silva and Jorge A. Benitez
			22.9 Outer membrane vesicle secretion: from envelope stress to biofilm formation, 1322
			Thomas Baumgarten and Hermann J. Heipieper
Section 23: Viable but nonculturable (VBNC) cells, 1329
			23.1 Resuscitation of Vibrios fromthe viable but nonculturable state is induced by quorum-sensing molecules, 1331
			Mesrop Ayrapetyan, Tiffany C. Williams, and James D. Oliver
			23.2 Differential resuscitative effects of pyruvate and its analogs on VBNC (viable but nonculturable)
			Salmonella, 1338
			Fumio Amano
			23.3 Environmental persistence of Shiga toxin–producing E. coli, 1346
			Philipp Aurass and Antje Flieger
			23.4 Of a tenacious and versatile relic: the role of inorganic polyphosphate (poly-P) metabolism in the survival, adaptation, and virulence of Campylobacter jejuni, 1354
			Issmat I. Kassem and Gireesh Rajashekara
Index, i1
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