Is E. coli good at chemotaxis?
Cell Behavior
2026-01-16 v2
Abstract
Bacteria seem masters of chemotaxis, yet recent work suggests otherwise. Henry Mattingly and colleagues (Nature Physics, 2026) argue that Escherichia coli uses only a small fraction of the sensory information available at its surface, challenging the long-held view that bacterial chemotaxis operates near physical sensing limits. This article offers a brief conceptual discussion of their findings, placing them in the context of classical chemotaxis models, robustness to noise, and broader perspectives drawn from physics, biology, and Greek mythology.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2601.05301,
title = {Is E. coli good at chemotaxis?},
author = {Robert G. Endres},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2601.05301},
year = {2026}
}
Comments
Pre-acceptance version of a News & Views article published in Nature Physics. The published version differs in wording and presentation