Is there any explanation for fast rate of division of bacterial cells which prevents further growth of individual cells?

1 Answer

A unicellular organism's growth is limited, and it divides pretty soon.

Explanation:

The answer lies in the structure of bacteria.
Most bacteria are unicellular,sessile (fixed to a place, unable to move) organisms.

  1. The cell is bound by a membrane and a cell wall. The cell singlehandedly does all the work of living. A living membrane is rather fragile and beyond a size it would not be able to 'grow' without bursting at the seams. The physical limitations of surface area:volume ratio do not permit growth to larger dimensions.

  2. There are in bacteria no mechanical support systems: no rigid apparatus within or on the outside of the cell that would allow growth to exceed microscopic dimensions.

  3. Most significantly bacterial species have evolved such that they can colonize an immense variety of substratum and use the various substrata to survive. A small size helps in this.

  4. Bacteria are genetically equipped so as to make the best use of their small size. The bacterial cell can take in only a limited amount of nutrition, and divides at a faster rate when nutrient supply is abundant. So individual cells do not grow in size, rather the population grows in number.

(Bacteria however often get together to form * mats* * * and overcome the limitations of being single celled and microscopic.)

For a more advanced explanation
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22575476