Cell division theory and individual-based modeling of microbial lag - Part I. The theory of cell division
Authored by K Bernaerts, EJ Dens, AR Standaert, Impe JF Van
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2004.11.016
Sponsors:
Flanders Research Foundation
Belgian Federal Science Policy Office (BELSPO)
Research Council of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
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Abstract
This series of two papers deals with the theory of cell division and its
implementation in an individual-based modeling framework. In this first
part, the theory of cell division is studied on an individual-based
level in order to learn more about the mechanistic principles behind
microbial lag phenomena. While some important literature on cell
division theory dates from 30 to 40 years ago, until now it has hardly
been introduced in the field of predictive microbiology. Yet, it
provides a large amount of information on how cells likely respond to
changing environmental conditions. On the basis of this theory, a
general theory on microbial lag behavior caused by a combination of
medium and/or temperature changes has been developed in this paper. The
proposed theory then forms the basis for a critical evaluation of
existing modeling concepts for microbial lag in predictive microbiology.
First of all, a more thorough definition can be formulated to define the
lag time), and the previously only vaguely defined physiological state
of the cells in terms of mechanistically defined parameters like cell
mass, RNA or protein content, specific growth rate and time to perform
DNA replication and cell division. On the other hand, existing
predictive models are evaluated with respect to the newly developed
theory. For the model of {[}Hills, B., Wright, K.A., 1994. New model for
bacterial growth in heterogeneous systems. J. Theor. Biol. 168, 31-41], a certain fitting parameter can also be related to physically meaningful
parameters while for the model of Augustin et al. (2000) {[}Augustin, J.-C., Rosso, L., Carlier, V.A. 2000. A model describing the effect of
temperature history on lag time for Listeria monocytogenes. Int. J. Food
Microbiol. 57, 169-181] a new, mechanistically based, model structure is
proposed. A restriction of the proposed theory is that it is only valid
for situations where biomass growth responds instantly to an environment
change. The authors are aware of the fact that this assumption is not
generally acceptable. Lag in biomass can be caused, for example, by a
delayed synthesis of some essential growth factor (e.g., enzymes). In
the second part of this series of papers {[}Dens, E.J., Bernaerts, K., Standaert, A.R., Kreft, J.-U., Van Impe, J.F., this issue. Cell division
theory and individual-based modeling of microbial lag: Part II. modeling
lag phenomena induced by temperature shifts. Int. J. Food Microbiol.], the theory of cell division is implemented in an individual-based
simulation program and extended to account for lags in biomass growth.
In conclusion, the cell division theory applied to microbial populations
in dynamic medium and/or temperature conditions provides a useful
framework to analyze microbial lag behavior. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All
rights reserved.
Tags
Simulation
Temperature
Cycle
Listeria-monocytogenes
Phase
Bacterial-growth
Salmonella-typhimurium
Escherichia coli b/r
Dna-synthesis
Chromosome replication