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Allocation of gene products to daughter cells is determined by the age of the mother in single Escherichia coli cells

Abstract

Gene expression and growth rate are highly stochastic in Escherichia coli. Some of the growth rate variations result from the deterministic and asymmetric partitioning of damage by the mother to its daughters. One daughter, denoted the old daughter, receives more damage, grows more slowly and ages. To determine if expressed gene products are also allocated asymmetrically, we compared the levels of expressed green fluorescence protein in growing daughters descending from the same mother. Our results show that old daughters were less fluorescent than new daughters. Moreover, old mothers, which were born as old daughters, produced daughters that were more asymmetric when compared to new mothers. Thus, variation in gene products in a clonal E. coli population also has a deterministic component. Because fluorescence levels and growth rates were positively correlated, the aging of old daughters appears to result from both the presence of both more damage and fewer expressed gene products.

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