Abstract
The morphology and replication of Mycoplasma felis in relation to growth phase in culture were studied by electron microscopy. The organisms showed 1.0 to 1.45-hr doubling times with typical bacterial-type growth curves when grown in dialysate broth supplemented with horse serum. Organisms were fixed for electron microscopy by using Veronal acetate-buffered 0.8% OsO(4) (pH 6.1) in 20% sucrose. The morphology of exponential-phase organisms differed markedly from that of stationary or death-phase organisms, which were essentially large round forms with either dispersed or abnormally aggregated cytoplasm. Plasticine models prepared from serial sections of organisms in exponential phase showed the organisms to be either disc-shaped, triangular, horseshoe-shaped, or multilobular. A central "hole" was frequently present in these structures and could be visualized in the lobular forms as an interconnecting circular membrane. The inner surface of this membrane often showed contact with a small membranous body about 0.12 mum in diameter. The significance of this body is unknown. The morphology of the various shapes was confirmed by using the phosphotungstic acid and critical point methods. When the ratios of the various forms in exponential-phase cultures were determined, it was found that a replication sequence could be proposed which accounted for not only the volume increase required to accommodate deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) replication but also the distribution of that DNA. Although it is likely that DNA replication in M. felis is a binary process, it appears that the mechanism for production of new cells need not be a binary process.
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