Inhibition of cell division in Escherichia coli K-12 by the R-factor R1 and copy mutants of R1.

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RESUMO

The effect of the copy number of plasmid R1drd-19 on cell division of Escherichia coli K-12 was studied in populations growing as steady-state cultures at different growth rates, the growth rate being varied by use of different carbon sources. The plasmid copy number was also varied by using copy mutants of the R-factor. The mean cell size was larger in populations carrying an R-factor than in R-factorless populations, an effect that was more pronounced at low growth rates and in populations carrying R-factor copy mutants. The increased cell size was due to formation of elongated cells in a fraction of the population and to an increase in the diameter of all cells. The majority of the cells divided at a normal cell length, but the presence of an R-factor caused some cells to elongate, probably by the uncoupling of chromosome replication and cell division. This can be explained as a competition between the chromosome and plasmid replicons for some replication factor(s), presumably acting on both initiation and elongation of replication. The formation of elongated cells was a reversible process, but occasionally some of the elongated cells reached lengths 20 times that of newborn cells. If cell division did not occur at the normal cell size, the septum was not formed until the cell size was four times that of a newborn cell. When an elongated cell divided, it usually formed a polar septum, thus producing a newborn cell of normal cell length. The ability of plasmid-containing cells to omit one cell division but to retain the capacity of dividing one mass doubling later is compatible with a mechanical model for septum formation and cell division.

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