Microbial communities play a significant role in bioremediation,plant
growth,human and animal digestion,global elemental cycles including the
carbon-cycle,and water treatment.They are also posed to be the engines of
renewable energy via microbial fuel cells which can reverse the process of
electrosynthesis.Microbial communication regulates many virulence mechanisms
used by bacteria.Thus,it is of fundamental importance to understand
interactions in microbial communities and to develop predictive tools that help
control them,in order to aid the design of systems exploiting bacterial
capabilities.This position paper explores how abstractions from
communications,networking and information theory can play a role in
understanding and modeling bacterial interactions.In particular,two forms of
interactions in bacterial systems will be examined:electron transfer and quorum
sensing.While the diffusion of chemical signals has been heavily
studied,electron transfer occurring in living cells and its role in cell-cell
interaction is less understood.Recent experimental observations open up new
frontiers in the design of microbial systems based on electron transfer,which
may coexist with the more well-known interaction strategies based on molecular
diffusion.In quorum sensing,the concentration of certain signature chemical
compounds emitted by the bacteria is used to estimate the bacterial population
size,so as to activate collective behaviors.In this position paper,queuing
models for electron transfer are summarized and adapted to provide new models
for quorum sensing.These models are stochastic,and thus capture the inherent
randomness exhibited by cell colonies in nature.It is shown that queuing models
allow the characterization of the state of a single cell as a function of
interactions with other cells and the environment,while being amenable to
complexity reduction.Comment: IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications (Bonus Issue on
Emerging Technologies -- invited