The pneumococcus is a bacterium that lives in the upper part of the throat behind the nose of many children and adults. In most cases it lives there harmlessly, but sometimes, it can move further into the body and cause serious illnesses as pneumonia or meningitis. Understanding how this bacterium grows could give us starting points for antibacterial drugs: if you can stop growth, you can stop the bacterium. Bacteria grow by cell division. The pneumococcus is no different: it grows in two directions, after which a wall is formed in the middle and the bacterium splits into two daughter cells. During this division cycle, the internal components of the cell need to be copied and brought to the two cell halves. In this thesis, we use several mi...