DM-1 - Lesson 15
DM-1 - Lesson 15
FUNDAMENTALS OF MICROBIOLOGY
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Lesson 15
MODES OF CELL DIVISION
Prokaryotes are much simpler in their organization than are eukaryotes. There are a great
many more organelles in eukaryotes, also more chromosomes. The usual method of
prokaryote cell division is termed binary fission. The prokaryotic chromosome is a single
DNA molecule that first replicates, then attaches each copy to a different part of the cell
membrane. When the cell begins to pull apart, the replicate and original chromosomes are
separated. Following cell splitting (cytokinesis), there are then two cells of identical genetic
composition (except for the rare chance of a spontaneous mutation). The prokaryote
chromosome is much easier to manipulate than the eukaryotic one. We thus know much
more about the location of genes and their control in prokaryotes. One consequence of this
asexual method of reproduction is that all organisms in a colony are genetic equals. When
treating a bacterial disease, a drug that kills one bacteria (of a specific type) will also kill all
other members of that clone (colony) it comes in contact with. Binary fission begins with
DNA replication. DNA replication starts from an origin of replication, which opens up into
a replication bubble (note: prokaryotic DNA replication usually has only 1 origin of
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replication, whereas eukaryotes have multiple origins of replication). The replication bubble
separates the DNA double strand, each strand acts as template for synthesis of a daughter
strand by semi conservative replication, until the entire prokaryotic DNA is duplicated.
(Fig. 15.1)
After this replication process, cell growth occurs. Each circular DNA strand then attaches
to the cell membrane. The cell elongates, causing the two chromosomes to separate.
Cell division in bacteria is controlled by the FtsZ, a collection of about a dozen proteins
that collect around the site of division. There, they direct assembly of the division septum.
The cell wall and plasma membrane starts growing transversely from near the middle of
the dividing cell. This separates the parent cell into two nearly equal daughter cells, each
having a nuclear body. The cell membrane then invaginates (grows inwards) and splits the
cell into two daughter cells, separated by a newly grown cell plate. (Fig. 15.2)
When bacteria are inoculated into a liquid growth medium, we can plot of the number of
cells in the population over time. (Fig. 15.3)
Immediately after inoculation of the cells into fresh medium, the population remains
temporarily unchanged. Although there is no apparent cell division occurring, the cells may
be growing in volume or mass, synthesizing enzymes, proteins, RNA, etc., and increasing
in metabolic activity. The length of the lag phase is apparently dependent on a wide variety
of factors including the size of the inoculum; time necessary to recover from physical
damage or shock in the transfer; time required for synthesis of essential coenzymes or
division factors; and time required for synthesis of new (inducible) enzymes that are
necessary to metabolize the substrates present in the medium. This is the period of
adjustment to new conditions. Little or no cell division occurs, population size doesn’t
increase. This is the phase of intense metabolic activity, in which individual organisms
grow in size. It may last from one hour to several days.
Cells begin to divide and generation time reaches a constant minimum. This is the period
of most rapid growth. The numbers of cells produced are more than the number of cells
dying. Cells are at highest metabolic activity. Cells are most susceptible to adverse
environmental factors such as antibiotic and radiation at this stage. The exponential phase
of growth is a pattern of balanced growth wherein all the cells are dividing regularly by
binary fission, and are growing by geometric progression. The cells divide at a constant
rate depending upon the composition of the growth medium and the conditions of
incubation. The rate of exponential growth of a bacterial culture is expressed as generation
time, also the doubling time of the bacterial population. Generation time (G) is defined as
the time (t) per generation (n = number of generations). Hence, G=t/n is the equation from
which calculations of generation time (below) derive.
By this stage, population size begins to stabilize. Number of cells produced is equal to
number of cells dying. Overall cell number does not increase. Cell division begins to slow
down. Factors that slow down microbial growth:
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The length of this phase is dependent upon the particular microorganism and the conditions
of the medium (habitat) Stationary phase can last for long periods of time and especially
when the microbes in nutrient-poor environment. During the stationary phase, if viable
cells are being counted, it cannot be determined whether some cells are dying and an equal
number of cells are dividing, or the population of cells has simply stopped growing and
dividing. The stationary phase, like the lag phase, is not necessarily a period of quiescence.
Bacteria that produce secondary metabolites, such as antibiotics, do so during the
stationary phase of the growth cycle (Secondary metabolites are defined as metabolites
produced after the active stage of growth). It is during the stationary phase that spore-
forming bacteria have to induce or unmask the activity of dozens of genes that may be
involved in sporulation process.
If incubation prolongs beyond stationary phase, a death phase ensues, in which the viable
cell population begins to decline. Population size begins to decrease. This is the stage
where number of cells dying starts exceeding number of cells produced. During the death
phase, the number of viable cells decreases geometrically (exponentially), essentially the
reverse of growth during the log phase.
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As mentioned above, bacterial growth rates during the phase of exponential growth, under
standard nutritional conditions (culture medium, temperature, pH, etc.), define the
bacterium's generation time. Generation times for bacteria vary from about 12 min to 24 h
or more. The generation time for E. coli in the laboratory is 15-20 min, but in the intestinal
tract, the coliform's generation time is estimated to be 12-24 h. For most known bacteria
that can be cultured, generation times range from about 15 min to 1 h. Symbionts such as
Rhizobium tend to have longer generation times. Many lithotrophs, such as the nitrifying
bacteria, also have long generation times. Some bacteria that are pathogens, such as
Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Treponema pallidum, have especially long generation
times, and this is thought to be an advantage in their virulence. Generation times for a few
bacteria are shown in Table (15.1)
Table 15.1 Generation times for some common bacteria under optimal conditions of
growth
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Solve for n:
n = 3.3 logb/B
G = t/n
Solve for G:
G = t / (3.3 log b / B)
Example: Taking example of Lactococcus lactis. Suppose in milk medium initial count of is
10,000 and final count is 10,000,000 and time interval is 4.3 h then what should be the
generation time of L. lactis in milk.
G = t / (3.3 log b / B)
Milk
G = 260 min/ 3.3 log 107/104
G = 26.26 min
Lactose broth
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G = 47.95 min
Similarly in milk medium initial count of milk is 10,000 and final count is 10,000,000 and
time interval is 7.9 h then what should be the generation time of L. lactis in lactose broth
Since numerous factors influence the cell cycle, some of them stochastic (random),
normal, non-synchronous cultures have cells in all stages of the cell cycle. Obtaining a
culture with a unified cell-cycle stage is very useful for biological research. Since cells are
too small for certain research techniques, a synchronous culture can be treated as a single
cell; the number of cells in the culture can be easily estimated, and quantitative
experimental results can simply be divided in the number of cells to obtain values that
apply to a single cell. Synchronous cultures have been extensively used to address
questions regarding cell cycle and growth, and the effects of various factors on these.
A number of clever techniques have been devised to obtain bacterial populations at the
same stage in the cell cycle. Some techniques involve manipulation of environmental
parameters which induces the population to start or stop growth at the same point in the
cell cycle, while others are physical methods for selection of cells that have just completed
the process of binary fission. Theoretically, the smallest cells in a bacterial population are
those that have just completed the process of cell division. Synchronous cultures rapidly
lose synchrony because not all cells in the population divide at exactly the same size, age
or time. Synchronous cultures can be obtained in several ways
External conditions can be changed, so as to arrest growth of all cells in the culture,
and then changed again to resume growth. The newly growing cells are now all
starting to grow at the same stage, and they are synchronized. For example, for
photosynthetic cells light can be eliminated for several hours and then re-introduced.
Another method is to eliminate an essential nutrient from the growth medium and
later to re-introduce it.
Cell growth can also be arrested using chemical growth inhibitors. After growth has
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completely stopped for all cells, the inhibitor can be easily removed from the culture
and the cells then begin to grow synchronously. Nocodazole, for example, is often
used in biological research for this purpose.
Cells in different growth stages have different physical properties. Cells in a culture
can thus be physically separated based on their density or size, for instance. This can
be achieved using centrifugation (for density) or filtration (for size).
In the Helmstetter-Cumming technique, a bacterial culture is filtered through a
membrane. Most bacteria pass through, but some remain bound to the membrane.
Fresh medium is then applied to the membrane and the bound bacteria start to grow.
Newborn bacteria that detach from the membrane are now all at the same stage of
growth; they are collected in a flask that now harbors a synchronous culture.
The cultures so far discussed for growth of bacterial populations are called batch cultures.
Since the nutrients are not renewed, exponential growth is limited to a few generations.
Bacterial cultures can be maintained in a state of exponential growth over long periods of
time using a system of continuous culture, designed to relieve the conditions that stop
exponential growth in batch cultures. Continuous culture, in a device called a chemostat,
can be used to maintain a bacterial population at a constant density, a situation that is, in
many ways, more similar to bacterial growth in natural environments.
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15.5.1 Chemostat
15.1.2 Turbidostat
Diauxie is a French word coined by Jacques Monod to mean two growth phases. The
word is used to describe the growth phases of a microorganism in batch culture as it
metabolizes a mixture of two sugars. Rather than metabolizing the two available sugars
simultaneously, microbial cells commonly consume them in a sequential pattern, resulting
in two separate growth phases. During the first phase, cells preferentially metabolize the
sugar on which it can grow faster (often glucose but not always). Only after the first sugar
has been exhausted do the cells switch to the second. At the time of the "diauxic shift",
there is often a lag period during which cells produce the enzymes needed to metabolize
the second sugar.
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Fig 15.6 The diauxic growth curve of E. coli grown in limiting concentrations of a
mixture of glucose and lactose
DM-1
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