Effect of Thymine Limitation on Chromosomal Deoxyribonucleic Acid Synthesis in Proteus mirabilis |
| |
Authors: | Marjorie H. Barnes and R. Rownd |
| |
Abstract: | The effects of thymine limitation on the rates of growth, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis, and increase in viable cell number for a thymine auxotroph of Proteus mirabilis were investigated. At thymine concentrations of 1.0 mug/ml and below, these rates were markedly decreased. After a reduction in thymine concentration from 10 mug/ml to 0.2 mug/ml, mass synthesis continued at the preshift rate for several hours. In contrast, the rate of DNA synthesis immediately decreased, resulting in a decrease in the DNA to mass ratio to about one-half of its normal level. Viable counts remained constant for several hours after the reduction in thymine concentration, and enlarged cells and multicellular "snakes" were formed. The rate of DNA synthesis was reduced at thymine concentrations below approximately 1.7 mug/ml. The addition of thymine to cultures which had been completely starved for thymine increased the rate of DNA synthesis to at least twice its normal value; this suggests that extra rounds of chromosome replication can be induced in P. mirabilis as previously observed in Escherichia coli. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|