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A powerful microscope technique reveals the molecular organisation of skin
Press
Release 5 December 2007 [PDF]
Seeing proteins in their natural
environment and interactions inside cells has been a longstanding
goal. Using an advanced microscopy technique
called cryo-electron tomography, researchers from the
European Molecular Biology Laboratory [EMBL] have visualised
proteins responsible for cell-cell contacts for the first
time. In this week's issue of Nature they publish the first 3D
image of human skin at molecular resolution and reveal the
molecular Velcro-like organisation that interlinks cells.
"This is a real breakthrough in two respects," says Achilleas
Frangakis, group leader at EMBL. "Never before has it been
possible to look in three dimensions at a tissue so close to its
native state at such a high resolution. We can now see details
at the scale of a few millionths of a millimetre. In this way we
have gained a new view on the interactions of molecules that
underlie cell adhesion in tissues - a mechanism that has been
disputed over decades."
So far, the only information available about a protein's position
and interactions in a cell was based on either light
microscopy images at poor resolution or techniques that
remove proteins from their natural context. Frangakis and his
group have been developing a technique called cryo-electron
tomography, with which a cell or tissue is instantly frozen in
its natural state and then examined with an electron microscope.
Electron microscopy normally requires tissue to be
treated with chemicals or coated in metal, a procedure that
disturbs the natural state of a sample. With cyro-electron
tomography, images are taken of the untreated sample from
different directions and assembled into an accurate 3D image
by a computer.
The researchers applied this technique to observe proteins
that are crucial for the integrity of tissues and organs like the
skin and the heart, but also play an important role in cell proliferation.
These proteins, called cadherins, are anchored in
cell membranes and interact with each other to bring cells
close together and interlink them tightly.
"We could see the interaction between two cadherins directly,
and this revealed where the strength of human skin comes
from," says Ashraf Al-Amoudi, who carried out the work in
Frangakis' lab. "The trick is that each cadherin binds twice:
once to a molecule from the juxtaposed cell, and once to its
next-door neighbour. The system works a bit like specialised
Velcro and establishes very tight contacts between cells."
The new insights into the cadherin system broadens the
understanding of structural aspects of cell adhesion and shed
light on other crucial processes such as cell proliferation. The
technical advances achieved in cryo-electron tomography of
frozen sections open up new possibilities to study more systems
at native conditions with molecular resolution.
Source Article
A. Al-Amoudi, D. Castaño Díez, M.J. Betts, A.S. Frangakis. The Molecular Architecture of Cadherins in Native Epidermal
Desmosomes. Nature, 6 December 2007
Press Contact
Anna-Lynn Wegener
Press Officer
EMBL Heidelberg
Tel: +49 6221 387-8452
Email: wegener@embl.de |