Press
Release 25 July 2003 [PDF]
"Cells
obey the laws of physics and chemistry," begins a famous biology
textbook, and one of the main goals of molecular biology is
to link the properties of single molecules to the behavior
of cells and the lives of organisms. So it is probably no
surprise that an important new discovery about the physical
forces that underlie cell division comes from a physics student-turned
biologist, using math and a laser "scalpel" integrated into
a microscope. The findings appear in the current issue of
the journal Science.Stephan Grill, Joe Howard, Erik Schäffer, Ernst Stelzer
and Tony Hyman in a collaboration between the Max-Planck
Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics in Dresden
and EMBL in Heidelberg have done something few scientists
have managed: they have counted the number of proteins that
help an egg cell divide. This initial division happens in
a special way in the roundworm C. elegans, one of biology's
most important model organisms.
"The fertilized egg splits into one large and one smaller
cell," Grill says. "That difference in size is crucial to
the development of the whole roundworm body. Normally people
think of cells as dividing into two identical daughters; if
they don't, there must be forces at work that create an imbalance.
We wanted to map them."
As a PhD student at EMBL, working between the research groups
of Tony Hyman and biophysicist/microscopist Ernst Stelzer,
Grill pursued an intriguing lead. A cable-like network of
proteins called microtubules tows freshly-copied DNA off to
opposing sides of the cell. The identical sets of genetic
material are then sealed off in their own cells. Normally
the anchors that the tow-lines are attached to, called centrosomes,
remain near the center of the cell. But in the roundworm egg,
one centrosome wanders off towards the outer rim of the cell.
Either it was being pulled there or pushed there, Grill reasoned,
so he began zapping parts of the cell with a laser, trying
to disrupt the mechanism.
Grill followed Hyman – and the laser microscope to Dresden,
maintaining the collaboration with Stelzer. In the latest
round of experiments, he used the laser to punch a hole in
the core of the centrosome. As the structure disintegrated,
he tracked what happened to the fragments. By measuring the
rate at which they drifted apart, he could put exact numbers
on the forces pulling them.
"The 'force-generators' are molecules called motors; their
job is to pull cargoes down microtubules," Grill says. "Here
they pull on the centrosome to position it. We thought that
there might be more motors on one side, or stronger motors,
which would create a stronger pull. But we couldn't distinguish
whether that was the case."
At this point, Joe Howard came into play, Grill says. "He
just looked at the data, and suggested that we should look
at the variance in the speed of the fragments from experiment
to experiment. This was possible because we had performed
a large enough number of experiments for a thorough statistical
analysis." The differences that they observed displayed an
intriguing feature that the scientists could submit to a mathematical
analysis. They learned that there are more motors pulling
on the posterior centrosome: about 25, compared to roughly
15 on the other side. Even though a small number of motors
are involved, it is sufficient to to pull the centrosome off-centre.
This has dramatic consequences it permits the proper
development of the body of the embryo.
The measurements will now permit Grill and his colleagues
to understand how other molecules change cellular forces and
influence cell division. They have already shown that a signal
passed along by the protein G-alpha is necessary to
activate motors and pull the centrosome off-centre.
"Cell division is a very complex process, whether the result
is identical daughters or asymmetric ones," Grill says. "Having
precise numbers will let us fine-tune the mathematical models
and use them to look for molecules that help orchestrate this
process in many other types of cells." Source Article
The
distribution of active force generators controls mitotic spindle
position Stephan W. Grill, Jonathon Howard, Erik Schäffer, Ernst
H. K. Stelzer, Anthony A. Hyman.
Science, 301, 25 July 2003
Scientific
Contacts Stephan
Grill Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Pfotenhauerstrasse 108, D01307 Dresden, Germany
Tel: +49
[0] 351 210 0
Fax: +49
[0] 351 210 2000
E-mail: grill@mpi-cbg.de
Ernst
Stelzer Knowledge Transfer Team, Bioscience Unit, Department of Trade and Industry, 151 Buckingham Palace Road, London SW1W 9SS, United Kingdom
Tel: +49 [0] 6221 387 354
E-mail: stelzer@embl.de |