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Title: | Polarity, asymmetry and aging: are there Yayatis among bacteria? |
Authors: | BAIG, ULFAT WATVE, MILIND LELE, UTTARA Dept. of Biology |
Keywords: | Polarity Asymmetry Yayatis among bacteria Escherichia coli Aggregated damage 2017 |
Issue Date: | Aug-2017 |
Publisher: | Indian Academy of Sciences |
Citation: | Current Science, 113(4),553. |
Abstract: | Bacteria have been shown to age. In an exponentially growing population some cells progressively slow down and stop dividing1 . This is thought to be due to asymmetric damage segregation in which old pole cells retain damaged components and the new pole cells receive newly synthesized components2 . Polarity implies functional asymmetry with a predefined direction with or without morphological difference. Cellular polarity and division asymmetry are common to yeast, bacteria and stem cells of multicell organisms3 . A number of processes in bacteria, including formation of endospores, flagella, stalks or buds show clear polar biases. |
URI: | http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3563 - |
ISSN: | 0011-3891 |
Appears in Collections: | JOURNAL ARTICLES |
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