James Shapiro and Clara Hsu, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill., USA
Escherichia coli microcolonies were produced after 11.5 h of growth at
37 on an agar slide. This mass of tightly packed individual cells
arises from a single cell through binary division.
The emergence of a second layer of cells can be seen in the central
region. The appearance of this layer (and of successive additional
layers) is a regular feature of early colony development, which shows
that the colony center remains an active zone of cell growth. With
longer times of incubation, additional layers form near the perimeters
of older microcolonies to generate a multilayered structure.