Abstract
There is a recent push to develop wild and non-domesticated Saccharomyces yeast strains into useful model systems for research in ecology and evolution. Yet, the variation between species and strains in important population parameters remains largely undescribed. Here, we investigated the relationship between two commonly used measures in microbiology to estimate growth rate - cell density and cell count - in 23 strains across all eight Saccharomyces species . We found that the slope of this relationship significantly differs among species and a given optical density (OD) does not translate into the same number of cells across species. We provide a cell number calculator based on our OD measurements for each strain used in this study. Surprisingly, we found a slightly positive relationship between cell size and the slope of the cell density-cell count relationship. Our results show that the strain- and species-specificity of the cell density and cell count relationship should be taken into account, for instance when running competition experiments requiring equal starting population sizes or when estimating the fitness of strains with different genetic backgrounds in experimental evolution studies.
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