kemotaxis
Kemotaxis (chemotaxis) is the movement of an organism or cell in response to a chemical concentration gradient. It can be toward higher concentrations of attractants or away from repellents, and it is a key mechanism in development, immune response, and microbial ecology.
In bacteria such as Escherichia coli, chemotaxis uses a biased random walk. Chemo-receptors detect attractants or
In eukaryotes, chemotaxis requires coordinated signaling that polarizes the cell and reorganizes the cytoskeleton. Chemoattractants binding
Chemotaxis is distinct from chemokinesis, which changes the rate of movement without directional bias, and from
Its study informs understanding of host defense, cancer metastasis, wound healing, and environmental microbiology, and underlies