Relationship of shape to initiation of new sites of envelope growth in Streptococcus faecium cells treated with beta-lactam antibiotics.

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RESUMO

Exponential-phase cells of Streptococcus faecium were treated with concentrations of ampicillin and cephalothin which, over 60 min, had little effect on increase in culture mass but resulted in about a 65% inhibition of increase in cell numbers. The resulting drug-treated cells underwent about a doubling in cell mass and volume above that of the untreated cells. The newly divided cells produced in the presence of drugs were shown to be due to the division of central or primary sites of envelope growth present at the time of treatment. Sites that were newly initiated (secondary sites) at the time of treatment or sites initiated after treatment did not divide but enlarged in length and girth to give abnormally large cells. Although the increase in average total volume was the same after each interval of treatment with ampicillin and cephalothin, the primary growth sites of the cephalothin-treated cells grew somewhat more slowly, and their secondary sites grew somewhat more quickly, than did those of the ampicillin-treated cells. Cephalothin-treated cells initiated secondary sites at a rate similar to that of the untreated cells, whereas the ampicillin-treated cells exhibited reduced rates of secondary site initiation. Two models are presented that account for these results.

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