0000000000141600
AUTHOR
Eduardo M. Garcia-roger
Is there an infant mortality in bacteria?
This manuscript proposes a significant step in our long-run investigation of infant mortality across species. Since 2016 (Berrut et al. 2016) a succession of studies (Bois et al. 2019) have traced infant mortality from organisms of high complexity (e.g. mammals) down to unicellular organisms. Infant mortality may be considered as a filtering process through which organisms with potentially lethal congenital defects are eliminated. Such defects may have many causes but here we focus particularly on mishaps resulting from non-optimal conditions in the production of proteins, enzymes and other crucial macromolecules. The statistical signature of infant mortality consists in a falling age-speci…
Transient frailty induced by cell division. Observation, reasons and implications
We know that stress-factors, e.g. X-rays, have an effect on cells that is more lethal in rapid exponential growth than in stationary phase. It is this effect which makes radiotherapy effective in cancer treatment. This stress effect can be explained in two ways: (a) more vulnerability in the growth phase, (b) improved protection capacity and repair mechanisms in the stationary phase. Although the two explanations do not exclude each other, they are very different in the sense that (a) is a general mechanism whereas (b) is strain and stress-factor dependent. In this paper we explore major facets of (a). Firstly, we emphasize that (a) can account for known experimental stress-factor evidence.…