Microbial psychology: Behavior, associative learning, and relation to antibiotic resistance
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Date
2023-02
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Type
Article
Publisher
MediPoeia
Series Info
Journal of Applied Pharmaceutical Science;Vol. 13(02), pp 001-010, Febuary, 2023
Doi
Scientific Journal Rankings
Abstract
Single-cell intelligence is a recent terminology suggested since it was clear that “biological intelligence” is deeply
rooted in a genetic basis. The possible applications of the term conception are many where noncoding RNAs could
be involved as a part to create a specific bacterial behavior through multiple gene regulation networks. Biological
intelligence is the origin of the genome unit formation in all organisms, whether unicellular or multicellular. This
intelligence is necessary and inevitable for the survival of the being on earth. Microbes are sensitive to some
antibiotics, but they quickly acquire resistance against these antibiotics, and this degree of development or adaptation
has its genetic factors that may be noncoding RNA or illegible on the genome. Perhaps the noncoding RNA could be
transferred into coding RNA or vice versa. Intelligence in beings, in order to survive and/or outlive the earth, is present
in its origin if it is a microbe germ, a plant pill, or a human or animal sperm. The current review aims to briefly clarify
the genetic basis of classical conditioning and the probability of the connection with the noncoding RNAs and if that
concept could be applied to enhance antibiotic sensitivity.
Description
Keywords
Classical conditioning,, electromagnetic cell signaling,, microbial psychology,, noncoding RNA,, single-cell intelligence.