Abstract

Cell division and DNA synthesis were measured in synchronous cultures of E. coll B/r growing in glucose minimal medium at 37 °. The kinetic curves were analysed in order to find the variability of replication initiation, termination, and cell division events during the cell cycle. It is inferred that under the conditions used, cells begin to divide 17 min ( D 0 = minimum D-period) after each termination of chromosome replication with a constant probability per unit of time (half-life = 4·5–6 min). This randomness produces an asymmetric frequency distribution of D-periods, similar but mirror-symmetric frequency distributions of initiation and termination periods, a symmetric, non-Gaussian distribution of interdivision intervals, and complex kinetic changes in the rate of DNA synthesis as a function of cell age. The results suggest that replication and division are precisely controlled with respect to mass accumulation, and the apparent variability of cell cycle events would only result from the use of the time of cell separation as a reference point for the definition of cell age rather than initiation or termination of replication.

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