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    Size control in mammalian cells involves modulation of both growth rate and cell cycle duration
    (London : Nature Publishing Group, 2018) Cadar, Clotilde; Monnier, Sylvain; Grilli, Jacopo; Sáez, Pablo J.; Srivastava, Nishit; Attia, Rafaele; Terriac, Emmanuel; Baum, Buzz; Cosentino-Lagomarsino, Marco; Piel, Matthieu
    Despite decades of research, how mammalian cell size is controlled remains unclear because of the difficulty of directly measuring growth at the single-cell level. Here we report direct measurements of single-cell volumes over entire cell cycles on various mammalian cell lines and primary human cells. We find that, in a majority of cell types, the volume added across the cell cycle shows little or no correlation to cell birth size, a homeostatic behavior called “adder”. This behavior involves modulation of G1 or S-G2 duration and modulation of growth rate. The precise combination of these mechanisms depends on the cell type and the growth condition. We have developed a mathematical framework to compare size homeostasis in datasets ranging from bacteria to mammalian cells. This reveals that a near-adder behavior is the most common type of size control and highlights the importance of growth rate modulation to size control in mammalian cells.