“…In oriC + oriX + tus cells the fork fusion point was close to the arithmetic mid-point between oriC and oriX and only slightly shifted toward the termination area (∼20 kb) (Dimude et al, 2018b), while for oriC + oriZ + tus cells forks terminated 60 kb in the direction of oriC (Ivanova et al, 2015;Dimude et al, 2016). We do not have any direct information about the speed of individual forks, but these results suggest that the forks leaving the termination area and traveling in the wrong orientation have, on average, a similar speed to the forks coming from oriC (oriX) or are even slightly faster (oriZ) (Ivanova et al, 2015;Dimude et al, 2016Dimude et al, , 2018b), similar to the situation observed in Vibrio cholerae where replication forks simply fused opposite the origin even when the origin was moved to an ectopic location (Galli et al, 2019).…”