Tissue-like structures formed by a bacterium
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Bacteria generally form only simple multicellular structures lacking the stable cell-cell connections characteristic of eukaryotic tissues. However, when the antibiotic moenomycin modifies peptidoglycan cell wall synthesis, rod-shaped cells of the Gram-negative bacterium Myxococcus xanthus become spherical, fuse their outer membranes, and assemble into stable, honeycomb-like lattices resembling eukaryotic tissues. These findings raise the intriguing possibility that some tissue-like organization could have evolved from stress-induced responses in bacterial ancestors.