Bacteria use quorum sensing to communicate via secreted signalling molecules called autoinducers. At high cell densities, autoinducers accumulate and bind receptor proteins to trigger expression of genes related to behaviors like bioluminescence and virulence factor production. Quorum sensing was first discovered in Vibrio fischeri by Nealson and Hastings in 1979. It allows bacteria to coordinate gene expression and behave as multicellular communities. Disrupting quorum sensing is a potential approach to inhibiting pathogenic bacterial infections and biofilms.