6The mutation rate is a fundamental factor in evolutionary genetics. Recently, mutation 7 rates were found to be strongly reduced at high density in a wide range of unicellular 8 organisms, prokaryotic and eukaryotic. Independently, cell division was found to 9 become more asymmetrical at increasing density in diverse organisms; in yeast, some 1 0 'mother' cells continue dividing, while their 'offspring' cells do not divide further. Here, 1 1 we investigate how this increased asymmetry in cell division at high density can be 1 2 reconciled with reduced mutation-rate estimates. We calculated the expected number of 1 3 mutant cells due to replication errors under various modes of segregation of template-1 4 DNA strands and copy-DNA strands, both under exponential and under linear growth. 1 5 We show that the observed reduction in the mutation rate at high density can be 1 6 explained if mother cells preferentially retain the template-DNA strands, since new 1 7 mutations are then confined to non-dividing daughter cells thus reducing the spread of 1 8 mutant cells. Any other inheritance mode results in an increase in the number of mutant 1 9 cells at higher density. The proposed hypothesis that patterns of DNA-strand 2 0 segregation are density dependent fundamentally challenges our current understanding 2 1 of mutation-rate estimates and extends the distinction between germline and soma to 2 2 unicellular organisms. 2 3 2 4soma distinction, immortal strand hypothesis, mutation rate, unicellular organisms 2 5