PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Synthetic biology: proteins set vesicles in motion

2023-05-19
(Press-News.org) Biophysicists have designed a new cell-like transport system that represents an important milestone on the road to artificial cells.

Creating artificial cells with life-like characteristics out of a minimal set of components is a major goal of synthetic biology. Autonomous motion is a key capability here, and one that is difficult to reproduce in the test tube. A team led by physicist Erwin Frey, Professor of Statistical and Biological Physics at LMU, and Petra Schwille from the Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, has now made an important advance in this area, as the researchers report in the journal Nature Physics.

The scientists have managed to maintain vesicles enclosed by a lipid membrane – so-called liposomes – in constant motion on a supporting membrane. This motion is driven by the interaction of the vesicle membrane with certain protein patterns, which in turn require the biochemical “fuel” ATP. These patterns are generated by a known system for biological pattern formation: the Min protein system, which controls cell division in the E. coli bacterium. Experiments in Schwille’s laboratory have shown that membrane-binding Min proteins in the artificial system arrange themselves asymmetrically around the vesicles and interact with them in such a way as to set them in motion. In the process, the proteins bind both to the supporting membrane and to the vesicles themselves. “The directed transport of large membrane vesicles is otherwise only found in higher cells, where complex motor proteins perform this task. To discover that small bacterial proteins are capable of something similar was a complete surprise,” observes Schwille. “It is currently unclear not only what exactly the protein molecules do at the membrane surface, but also for what purpose bacteria could need such a function.”

Two possible mechanisms

With the aid of theoretical analyses, Frey’s team identified two different mechanisms that could be behind the motion: “One possible mechanism is that the proteins on the supporting membrane interact with those on the vesicle surface somewhat like a zipper and form or dissolve molecular compounds in this way,” explains Frey. “If there are more proteins on one side than on the other, the zipper opens there, while it closes on the other side. The vesicle thus moves in the direction in which there are fewer proteins.” The second possible mechanism is that the membrane-bound proteins deform the vesicle membrane and alter its curvature. This change in shape then causes the forward motion.

“Both mechanisms are possible in principle,” emphasizes Frey. “What we do know for certain, however, is that the protein patterns on the supporting membrane and on the vesicle cause the motion. This represents a big step forward on the road to artificial cells.” The authors are convinced that their system can serve as a modeling platform in the future for the development of artificial systems with life-like movements.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New subtypes identified in difficult-to-treat ovarian cancer – Potential for discovering new treatments

2023-05-19
Every year, more than 40,000 women die of ovarian cancer in Europe. Ovarian cancer is a genetically very heterogeneous disease, which makes it exceptionally difficult to study and treat. The prognosis is particularly poor in ovarian high grade serous carcinoma (HGSC), a subtype of ovarian cancer. Less than 40% of patients with this subtype survive five years after their diagnosis. The researchers were able to classify HGSC tumours into three groups on the basis of genomic changes. The groups differ in the intracellular signalling pathways, the ways in which the tumours grow, and response ...

Hyperpolarization: Multi-million funding for joint Collaborative Research Centre of Leipzig University and Chemnitz University of Technology

Hyperpolarization: Multi-million funding for joint Collaborative Research Centre of Leipzig University and Chemnitz University of Technology
2023-05-19
The Collaborative Research Centre, to be known as HYP*MOL, will bring together 29 professors and early career researchers from both universities, as well as other external research partners, to study electron and nuclear spin hyperpolarization in molecular systems. “This funding is both a cause for celebration and a great incentive for everyone involved,” says Professor Eva Inés Obergfell, Rector of Leipzig University. “Hyperpolarization is an exciting and rapidly evolving field of research. I believe that our research team will contribute new insights that will be appreciated at an international level.” Leipzig University is now involved ...

Novel tin-based metal–organic frameworks for reducing carbon dioxide to formate

Novel tin-based metal–organic frameworks for reducing carbon dioxide to formate
2023-05-19
The never-ending demand for carbon-rich fuels to drive the economy keeps adding more and more carbon dioxide (CO2) to the atmosphere. While efforts are being made to reduce CO2 emissions, that alone cannot counter the adverse effects of the gas already present in the atmosphere. So, scientists have come up with innovative ways to use existing atmospheric CO2 by transforming it into useful chemicals such as formic acid (HCOOH) and methanol. A popular method for carrying out such conversions is to use visible ...

Evolutionary reinforcement learning promises further advances in machine learning

Evolutionary reinforcement learning promises further advances in machine learning
2023-05-19
Evolutionary reinforcement learning is an exciting frontier in machine learning, combining the strengths of two distinct approaches: reinforcement learning and evolutionary computation. In evolutionary reinforcement learning, an intelligent agent learns optimal strategies by actively exploring different approaches and receiving rewards for successful performance. This innovative paradigm combines reinforcement learning's trial-and-error learning with evolutionary algorithms' ability to mimic natural selection, ...

Room-temperature, solid-state synthesis of high-quality Cs3Cu2I5 thin films

Room-temperature, solid-state synthesis of high-quality Cs3Cu2I5 thin films
2023-05-19
Advanced electronic devices require high-quality materials such as metal halide phosphors that can effectively convert light into measurable signals. Toxic element-free copper-based iodides such as cesium copper iodide (Cs3Cu2I5: CCI) are particularly promising in this regard. CCI is an efficient blue light-emitting material that can convert almost all the absorbed energy into detectable light, making them ideal for use in deep-UV photodetectors and γ-ray scintillators for detecting ionizing radiation, ...

Complex biological behaviors: how multiple oscillators interact in live cells

Complex biological behaviors: how multiple oscillators interact in live cells
2023-05-19
Oscillatory dynamics in fundamental biological processes, such as circadian clocks, segmentation, and transcription factor responses, requires precise quantitative control for proper cell regulation and fate decisions. Many biological oscillators are influenced by multiple oscillatory signals, and their behavior is understood through the framework of Arnold tongues. However, this approach simplifies the situation to a single external signal and one internal oscillator, which oversimplifies real biological systems. Our understanding of ...

Study reveals the persistent effects of corruption on trust and voting

2023-05-19
The short-term effects of corruption are often obvious. Numerous sources, both in Russia and in the West, consider the military's endemic corruption one of the main reasons of the logistical problems, very low troop morale, and massive casualties of the Red Army in Ukraine. In late 2016, a corruption scandal cost the first woman elected head of state in an Asian country, South Korea's Park Geun-hye, impeachment.   We can well imagine that the ongoing “Qatargate,” a political scandal raised by the suspicion ...

Penn Medicine to open new crisis response center as part of a unified mental health care hub at Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania – Cedar Avenue

2023-05-19
PHILADELPHIA—Penn Medicine is launching a new community mental health hub at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania — Cedar Avenue (HUP Cedar), co-locating inpatient and outpatient psychiatric care with a new crisis response center (CRC) at the facility. The multi-year plan will put crucial psychiatric and substance use care in easy reach for West and Southwest Philadelphia residents, at a time when both mental illness and drug and alcohol dependence are surging in the city. The project will begin with moving inpatient psychiatric and drug and alcohol detoxification units from Penn Presbyterian ...

Insilico Medicine-led study combines quantum computing and generative AI for drug discovery

Insilico Medicine-led study combines quantum computing and generative AI for drug discovery
2023-05-19
Insilico Medicine (“Insilico”), a clinical stage generative artificial intelligence (AI)-driven drug discovery company, today announced that it combined two rapidly developing technologies, quantum computing and generative AI, to explore lead candidate discovery in drug development and successfully demonstrated the potential advantages of quantum generative adversarial networks in generative chemistry.  The study, published May 13 in the American Chemical Society’s Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling, a leading journal in computational modeling, was led by Insilico’s Taiwan and UAE centers which focus on pioneering ...

Rice, Baylor developing ‘glyco-immune’ checkpoint inhibitor

Rice, Baylor developing ‘glyco-immune’ checkpoint inhibitor
2023-05-19
HOUSTON – (May 19, 2023) – Researchers from Rice University and Baylor College of Medicine are hoping a first-of-its-kind “glyco-immune” checkpoint inhibitor could be the key to stopping bone cancer metastasis for breast cancer survivors. Breast cancer often migrates to other organs. As many as 40% of breast cancer survivors are diagnosed with metastatic cancer, sometimes years after their initial treatment. Bone metastasis is involved in more than two-thirds of those cases, and bone metastatic lesions are known to “seed” metastatic cancer in other organs of the body. Rice chemist Han Xiao and Baylor biologist ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

PFAS exposure and endocrine disruption among women

Vaccines and the 2024 US presidential election

New approach narrows uncertainty in future warming and remaining carbon budget for 2 °C

When pregnancy emergencies collide with state abortion bans

American College of Cardiology supports front of package nutrition labeling

This fossil bird choked to death on rocks, and no one knows why

An iron-on electronic circuit to create wearable tech

When you’re happy, your dog might look sad

Subnational income inequality revealed: Regional successes may hold key to addressing widening gap globally

Protein puppeteer pulls muscle stem cells’ strings

Study: A genetic variant may be the reason why some children with myocarditis develop heart failure, which could be fatal

Social justice should not be tokenistic but at the heart of global restoration efforts

A new kind of copper from the research reactor

Making simulations more accurate than ever with deep learning

Better predicting the lifespan of clean energy equipment, towards a more efficient design

Five ways microplastics may harm your brain

Antibody halts triple-negative breast cancer in preclinical models

Planned birth at term reduces pre-eclampsia in those at high risk

Penguins starved to death en masse, study warns, as some populations off South Africa estimated to have fallen 95% in just eight years

New research explains how our brains store and change memories

Space shuttle lessons: Backtracks can create breakthroughs

New study finds cystic fibrosis drug allows patients to safely scale back lung therapies

From field to lab: Rice study reveals how people with vision loss judge approaching vehicles

Study highlights underrecognized link between kidney disease and cognitive decline

Researchers find link between psychosocial stress and early signs of heart inflammation in women

Research spotlight: How long-acting injectable treatment could transform care for postpartum women with HIV

Preempting a flesh-eating fly’s return to California

Software platform helps users find the best hearing protection

Clean hydrogen breakthrough: Chemical lopping technology with Dr. Muhammad Aziz (full webinar)

Understanding emerges: MBL scientists visualize the creation of condensates

[Press-News.org] Synthetic biology: proteins set vesicles in motion