Abstract
The effects of inhibition of protein and RNA synthesis on initiation of chromosome replication in Escherichia coli B r were determined by measuring rates of DNA synthesis during the division cycle before and after addition of chloramphenicol and rifampicin. The ability of cells to initiate a round of replication depended upon the pattern of chromosome replication during the division cycle. Initiation in the presence of chloramphenicol (200 μ/ml) and rifampicin (100 gmg/ml) was observed only in slowly growing cells which normally initiated a new round between the end of the previous round and the subsequent division (i.e. in the D period of the division cycle). The cells that initiated were in the D period at the time of addition of the drugs. Rapidly growing cells which normally initiated before the D period and slowly growing cells which normally initiated after the D period did not initiate in the presence of the drugs. The contrasting effects of the drugs in cells possessing different chromosome replication patterns, and the coupling between septum-crosswall formation (the D period) and initiation suggest that the timing of initiation of chromosome replication in E. coli is controlled by the cell envelope.
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