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This content will become publicly available on August 1, 2026

Title: Gene expression cycles drive non-exponential bacterial growth
Bacterial populations typically exhibit exponential growth under resource-rich conditions, yet individual cells often deviate from this pattern. Recent work has shown that the elongation rates of and increase throughout the cell cycle (super-exponential growth), while displays a midcycle minimum (convex growth), and grows linearly. Here, we develop a single-cell model linking gene expression, proteome allocation, and mass growth to explain these diverse growth trajectories. By calibrating model parameters with experimental data, we show that DNA-proportional mRNA transcription produces near-exponential growth, whereas deviations from this proportionality yield the observed non-exponential growth patterns. Analysis of gene expression perturbations reveals that ribosome expression primarily controls dry mass growth rate, whereas cell envelope protein expression more strongly affects cell elongation rate. We show that cell-cycle-dependent transcription dynamics give rise to convex, super-exponential, and linear modes of cell elongation observed experimentally, demonstrating how the timing of cell envelope and ribosomal protein expressions drive cell-cycle-specific behaviors. These findings provide a mechanistic basis for non-exponential single-cell growth and offer insights into how bacterial cells dynamically regulate elongation rates within each generation.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2310741
PAR ID:
10633576
Author(s) / Creator(s):
;
Publisher / Repository:
APS
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Physical Review Research
Volume:
7
Issue:
3
ISSN:
2643-1564
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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