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BINARY FISSION


Binary fission

'Binary fission' is the form of asexual reproduction in single-celled organisms by which one cell divides into two cells of the same size, used by most prokaryotes. This process results in the reproduction of a living cell by division into two equal or near-equal parts.
Mitosis is not the same as binary fission.

Contents
Genetic effects
Process
Organisms using binary fission
References
See also

Genetic effects


Binary fission is asexual; the organism splits directly into two equal -sized offsprings,each with a copy of the parent's genetic material. Binary fission is a common type of reproduction in single-celled organisms.
Bacterial DNA has a relatively high mutation rate. This rapid rate of genetic change is what makes bacteria capable of developing resistance to antibiotics and helps them exploit invasion into a wide range of environments.
Organisms that reproduce through binary fission generally have exponential growth phases. ''Escherichia coli'' cells are able to divide every 20 minutes under optimum conditions.

Process


Amimation showing the complete process of binary fission.
Binary fission begins with DNA replication. DNA replication starts from an origin of replication, which opens up into a replication bubble (note: prokaryotic DNA replication usually has only 1 origin of replication, whereas eukaryotes have multiple origins of replication). The replication bubble separates the DNA double strand, each strand acts as template for synthesis of a daughter strand by semiconservative replication, until the entire prokaryotic DNA is duplicated.
After this replicational process, cell growth occurs.
Each circular DNA strand then attaches to the cell membrane, sometimes by a mesosome. The cell elongates, causing the two chromosomes to separate.
Cell division in bacteria is controlled by the septal ring, a collection of about a dozen proteins that collect around the site of division. There, they direct assembly of the division septum. [1]
The cell membrane then invaginates (grows inwards) and splits the cell into two daughter cells, separated by a newly grown cell plate. This process is called cytokinesis.

Organisms using binary fission


Many organisms reproduce by binary fission, such as:

Bacteria

Archaea, such as Pyrodictium abyssi (an anaerobic thermophile of deep-sea hydrothermal vents)
Some eukaryotes reproduce using binary fission-like methods. Mitosis is thought to derive from binary fission.

References


1. http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/links/doi/10.1111/j.1365-2958.2004.04283.x/pdf

See also



Cell cycle

Cell division

Mitosis

Cytokinesis

Cell growth

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