| Literature DB >> 34612203 |
Alexandra Colin1, Gabriele Micali2,3, Louis Faure1, Marco Cosentino Lagomarsino4,5, Sven van Teeffelen1,6.
Abstract
Cells must control the cell cycle to ensure that key processes are brought to completion. In Escherichia coli, it is controversial whether cell division is tied to chromosome replication or to a replication-independent inter-division process. A recent model suggests instead that both processes may limit cell division with comparable odds in single cells. Here, we tested this possibility experimentally by monitoring single-cell division and replication over multiple generations at slow growth. We then perturbed cell width, causing an increase of the time between replication termination and division. As a consequence, replication became decreasingly limiting for cell division, while correlations between birth and division and between subsequent replication-initiation events were maintained. Our experiments support the hypothesis that both chromosome replication and a replication-independent inter-division process can limit cell division: the two processes have balanced contributions in non-perturbed cells, while our width perturbations increase the odds of the replication-independent process being limiting.Entities:
Keywords: E. coli; cell cycle control; cell division; chromosome replication; computational biology; infectious disease; live-cell microscopy; microbiology; single-cell correlations; systems biology; theoretical modeling
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34612203 PMCID: PMC8555983 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.67495
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140