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Journal of Bacteriology, November 1998, p. 5601-5611, Vol. 180, No. 21
Institute for Nature Conservation
Research1 and
Department of
Zoology,3 G. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences,
Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, 69978 Tel Aviv, Israel, and
Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Arizona
University, Flagstaff, Arizona 86011-56402
Received 25 February 1998/Accepted 1 September 1998
Epulopiscium fishelsoni, gut symbiont of the brown
surgeonfish (Acanthurus nigrofuscus) in the Red Sea,
attains a larger size than any other eubacterium, varies 10- to 20-fold
in length (and >2,000-fold in volume), and undergoes a complex daily
life cycle. In early morning, nucleoids contain highly condensed DNA in
elongate, chromosome-like structures which are physically separated
from the general cytoplasm. Cell division involves production of two (rarely three) nucleoids within a cell, deposition of cell walls around
expanded nucleoids, and emergence of daughter cells from the parent
cell. Fluorescence measurements of DNA, RNA, and other cell components
indicate the following. DNA quantity is proportional to cell volume
over cell lengths of ~30 µm to >500 µm. For cells of a given
size, nucleoids of cells with two nucleoids (binucleoid) contain
approximately equal amounts of DNA. And each nucleoid of a binucleoid
cell contains one-half the DNA of the single nucleoid in a uninucleoid
cell of the same size. The life cycle involves approximately equal
subdivision of DNA among daughter cells, formation of apical caps of
condensed DNA from previously decondensed and diffusely distributed
DNA, and "pinching" of DNA near the middle of the cell in the
absence of new wall formation. Mechanisms underlying these patterns
remain unclear, but formation of daughter nucleoids and cells occurs
both during diurnal periods of host feeding and bacterial cell growth
and during nocturnal periods of host inactivity when mean bacterial
cell size declines.
0021-9193/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Gigantism in a Bacterium, Epulopiscium
fishelsoni, Correlates with Complex Patterns in Arrangement,
Quantity, and Segregation of DNA
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biological Sciences, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ
86011-5640. Phone: (520) 523-7505. Fax: (520) 523-7500. E-mail:
Linn.Montgomery{at}NAU.EDU.
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