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Some bacteria in your mouth can divide into as many as 14 cells at once

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Among the more than 500 species of bacteria that thrive in the human mouth, one seems to play by its own rules.

Rather than reproducing by splitting itself in two, like most bacteria do, Corynebacterium matruchotii divides into as many as 14 cells simultaneously, researchers report in the Sept. 10 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

This video shows one Corynebacterium matruchotii bacterium dividing into many daughter cells, which themselves immediately rapidly divide. No other known bacteria reproduces in this way, researchers say. The strategy may allow C. matruchotii to quickly monopolize the human mouth, where it typically resides.

C. matruchotii is a filamentous bacterium known to reside in plaque near the gum line. Microbiologist Scott Chimileski of the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Mass., noticed cells prolifically splitting as he and colleagues used time-lapse imaging to study live microbial communities in the human mouth (SN: 7/11/16).

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