General quantitative relations linking cell growth and the cell cycle in Escherichia coli.

Nat Microbiol

CAS Key Laboratory for Quantitative Engineering Biology, Shenzhen Institute of Synthetic Biology, Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen, People's Republic of China.

Published: August 2020

Growth laws emerging from studies of cell populations provide essential constraints on the global mechanisms that coordinate cell growth. The foundation of bacterial cell cycle studies relies on two interconnected dogmas that were proposed more than 50 years ago-the Schaechter-Maaloe-Kjeldgaard growth law that relates cell mass to growth rate and Donachie's hypothesis of a growth-rate-independent initiation mass. These dogmas spurred many efforts to understand their molecular bases and physiological consequences. Although they are generally accepted in the fast-growth regime, that is, for doubling times below 1 h, extension of these dogmas to the slow-growth regime has not been consistently achieved. Here, through a quantitative physiological study of Escherichia coli cell cycles over an extensive range of growth rates, we report that neither dogma holds in either the slow- or fast-growth regime. In their stead, linear relations between the cell mass and the rate of chromosome replication-segregation were found across the range of growth rates. These relations led us to propose an integral-threshold model in which the cell cycle is controlled by a licensing process, the rate of which is related in a simple way to chromosomal dynamics. These results provide a quantitative basis for predictive understanding of cell growth-cell cycle relationships.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8059327PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41564-020-0717-xDOI Listing

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