PMID: 6159519Jan 1, 1980Paper

Synthesis of macromolecules in synchronously grown Arthrobacter

Microbios
G LefebvreR Gay

Abstract

The synchronous growth of Arthrobacter has not yet been studied. We have shown that synchrony of A. crystallopoietes and A. globiformis cultures can be achieved in a liquid synthetic medium by inoculating a fresh medium with cells taken from an advanced stationary phase culture. DNA content measurements and pulsed incorporations of tritiated thymidine have been used to show that DNA synthesis occurs in a stepwise manner in these synchronized cultures. The use of absorbance of cultures as a monitor of synchronized cell growth was especially useful since cells did not separate during the exponential phase. The breaks in the absorbance versus time curve indicated a slow-down in mass synthesis. Protein and RNA synthesis occurred in two waves during the time necessary for a doubling of cell mass: a first increase was observed at the beginning of the DNA replication; after a slow-down, a second sharp increase occurred after the replication of DNA. These results are discussed in relation to previous data on the existence of a differential transcription during the development of A. crystallopoietes.

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