Theory for transitions between log and stationary phases: universal laws for lag time
Yusuke Himeoka, and Kunihiko Kaneko

TL;DR
This paper introduces a universal theoretical framework for understanding bacterial growth transitions, including lag, stationary, and death phases, revealing laws governing lag time and growth suppression under starvation.
Contribution
The study develops a simple cell model incorporating inhibitors to explain growth phase transitions and predicts universal laws for lag time and growth suppression.
Findings
Lag time scales with the square root of starvation duration
Lag time inversely correlates with maximal growth rate
Lag time distribution exhibits an exponential tail
Abstract
Quantitative characterization of bacterial growth has gathered substantial attention since Monod's pioneering study. Theoretical and experimental work has uncovered several laws for describing the log growth phase, in which the number of cells grows exponentially. However, microorganism growth also exhibits lag, stationary, and death phases under starvation conditions, in which cell growth is highly suppressed, while quantitative laws or theories for such phases are underdeveloped. In fact, models commonly adopted for the log phase that consist of autocatalytic chemical components, including ribosomes, can only show exponential growth or decay in a population, and phases that halt growth are not realized. Here, we propose a simple, coarse-grained cell model that includes inhibitor molecule species in addition to the autocatalytic active protein. The inhibitor forms a complex with active…
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