81. A bacterial population has a plasmid with copy number 'n'. It was observed that on an average in one out of 2(n-1) cell divisions. therewas spontaneous plasmid curing. It was inferred from the observation that: A. Each cell division does not have equal probability of plasmid curing. B. There is no evidence for any mechanism of plasmid segregation in the two daughter cells. C. Plasmid distribution to daughter cells random. D. Each plasmid has an equal chance of being in either of the two daughter cells. Which of the combinations of above statements is true? (1) A and B(2) B and D (3) only A (4) B, C and D

81. A bacterial population has a plasmid with copy number ‘n’. It was observed that on an average in one out of 2(n-1) cell divisions. there was spontaneous plasmid curing. It was inferred from the observation that:
A. Each cell division does not have equal probability of plasmid curing.
B. There is no evidence for any mechanism of plasmid segregation in the two daughter cells.
C. Plasmid distribution to daughter cells random.
D. Each plasmid has an equal chance of being in either of the two daughter cells.

Which of the combinations of above statements is true?

(1) A and B
(2) B and D
(3) only A
(4) B, C and D


Background

In bacterial populations, plasmids are extrachromosomal DNA elements that replicate independently. The copy number ‘n’ of a plasmid refers to the average number of plasmid copies per cell. During cell division, plasmids must be distributed to daughter cells to maintain plasmid inheritance. Plasmid curing refers to the loss of plasmids from cells, which can occur spontaneously.


Interpretation of the Observation

  • The observed spontaneous plasmid curing frequency is approximately 1 in 2(n-1) cell divisions.

  • This frequency suggests that plasmid segregation to daughter cells occurs randomly rather than by an active partitioning mechanism.

  • If plasmids were actively segregated, curing rates would be much lower due to precise distribution.


Analysis of Statements

A. Each cell division does not have equal probability of plasmid curing.

  • This is not supported by the observation; spontaneous curing is a probabilistic event consistent across divisions.

B. There is no evidence for any mechanism of plasmid segregation in the two daughter cells.

  • True. The curing frequency suggests lack of active segregation, implying random partitioning.

C. Plasmid distribution to daughter cells is random.

  • True. Random segregation leads to expected curing rates matching the observed frequency.

D. Each plasmid has an equal chance of being in either of the two daughter cells.

  • True. This assumption underlies the random segregation model.


Supporting Evidence from Literature

  • Many low-copy-number plasmids encode partitioning (par) systems that actively segregate plasmids using ATPase-driven mechanisms and centromere-like sites to ensure faithful inheritance.

  • High-copy-number plasmids often rely on random distribution due to their abundance, minimizing plasmid loss probability.

  • The observed curing frequency aligns with a random segregation model, where each plasmid independently segregates to daughter cells with equal probability.


Correct Combination of Statements

(4) B, C and D


Summary Table

Statement Correctness Explanation
A False Curing probability is consistent per division
B True No evidence of active segregation mechanism
C True Plasmid distribution is random
D True Each plasmid equally likely in either daughter

Conclusion

The spontaneous plasmid curing frequency observed indicates that plasmid segregation occurs randomly without an active partitioning mechanism. Each plasmid copy has an equal chance of being inherited by either daughter cell, leading to the calculated curing rate. Therefore, statements B, C, and D are true, while statement A is incorrect.


Keywords

plasmid curing, plasmid segregation, bacterial plasmids, random plasmid distribution, partitioning systems, plasmid copy number, bacterial cell division, plasmid inheritance, par systems, plasmid loss frequency


Final answer:
(4) B, C and D

11 Comments
  • Surbhi Rajawat
    July 29, 2025

    1st 2nd and 3rd statements are correct, though I was not aware of the term “plasmid curing” but the test explanation made it all clear.

  • Soniya Shekhawat
    July 29, 2025

    Very informative with easy explanation

  • Kajal
    July 29, 2025

    Option 4 is correct but not aware about it but the detailed helped much

  • Dipti Sharma
    July 29, 2025

    Correct answer: 4
    B,C,D statements are correct
    Although seems complicated at first but we can choose right answer by eliminating the options bcz option D was correct for sure .
    Explanation made it more clear

  • Vijay Marmat
    July 30, 2025

    Guru Dev

  • Shivani panwar
    July 30, 2025

    Ans is 4

  • Mahima Sharma
    August 3, 2025

    4th

  • Aafreen Khan
    August 23, 2025

    Done by explanation ✅

  • Komal Sharma
    October 5, 2025

    The spontaneous plasmid curing frequency observed indicates that plasmid segregation occurs randomly without an active partitioning mechanism. Each plasmid copy has an equal chance of being inherited by either daughter cell, leading to the calculated curing rate

  • Deepika Sheoran
    November 7, 2025

    Option 4 th is correct answer

  • Rishu
    April 9, 2026

    Done sir

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