Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Medical Technology, and Graduate Committee on Genetics, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721
Abstract
Spores of the
Bacillus subtilis
minicell-producing mutant
div IV-B1
were germinated and grown to microcolonies in chambers which facilitate continuous observation of the developing clones with a phase-contrast microscope. Time lapse photographs were taken of 46 clones, covering the period from the beginning of outgrowth until at least two rounds of cell division had been completed. Cell lineages were constructed from contour length measurements of the photographs. These data include cell lengths, division site locations, and cell numbers in clones of various ages. From these data we have determined that the probability of a minicell being produced at any division by the
div IV-B1
mutant is 0.31. The location of the abnormal division site which generates the first minicell produced in the outgrowing clone appears to be random with respect to the existing cell poles. In contrast, the location of the second abnormal division site, and hence the second minicell, is not random but rather occurs preferentially in proximity to the first minicell. This clustering of abnormal events suggests that division site location is related to pole age (generations), although other influences on minicell clustering cannot be ruled out at present.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
18 articles.
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