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» » » » » Researchers reverse engineer the ‘fireworks of life’


Imagine standing in a lumberyard and being asked to build a house -- without blueprints or instructions of any kind. The materials are all in front of you, but that doesn't mean you have the first idea how to get from point A to point B. That was the situation facing the Princeton biologists who are building microtubules, the skeleton of the cell, from scratch.

Researchers reverse engineer the ‘fireworks of life’
Credit: Akanksha Thawani, Princeton University
"We did not think it was possible," said Sabine Petry, an assistant professor of molecular biology. For years, Petry and the researchers in her lab have dazzled the biological world with videos of what they call "the fireworks of life," which show the branching and growth of these microscopic structures. "From making fireworks to getting to the recipe of how fireworks are made? We had imagined and brainstormed about it for five years." In that time, her team had painstakingly determined the fireworks' components, one protein at a time, and graduate student Akanksha Thawani had come up with a model for the sequence, but testing it seemed impossible.

But then the journal's reviewers told them they couldn't publish their model unless they proved it experimentally.


"Admittedly, after watching Akanksha work on this so long, when the referee asked for more work, I was skeptical that we could sort out the order of molecular attachments in any reasonable time," said Howard Stone, Princeton's Donald R. Dixon '69 and Elizabeth W. Dixon Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and Thawani's co-adviser. "But Akanksha was focused and disciplined, and systematically tackled experiments that identified the order of the molecular attachments. It was stunning to follow her detective work."

"They asked us, and we wanted to get it published, so that did the trick," Petry said. "The review process gets a lot of bad press, but reviewers can sometimes push you to the next level." The results of their work appear in the journal eLife.

Building a house without blueprints

Microtubules are the bricks and mortar of the cell, used to build cell walls and the spindles of mitosis and meiosis -- without them, even single-celled organisms couldn't reproduce -- but until now, no one knew exactly how microtubules branch off each other. For a decade, researchers have known that the branching, caused as the microtubules grow from each other, was key to assembling spindles and making connections between the cell components.

"The missing piece for a decade or so has been this microtubule branching -- that microtubules don't grow just linearly, but they actually branch, and they can branch again and again, creating those fireworks," Petry said.

While Petry's team had identified the components necessary to build microtubules, they hadn't put together the sequence -- the recipe -- that spelled out exactly how to assemble them, at the molecular level, to make the spindles grow and branch into fireworks. And for the most part, that was fine. Biology did it for them. If they put the right components together, the fireworks just grew.


But how did it happen, exactly? That was the question that nagged at Thawani, a chemical and biological engineering graduate student doing her research in Petry's lab.

"For the longest time, I've been staring at them and wondering how this worked, from scratch," said Thawani, who recently won the Charlotte Elizabeth Proctor Fellowship for graduate students in their final year. "We start from no microtubules at all, and then, within 15 minutes, we have these beautiful structures. How do you generate a structure from those nanometer-sized proteins? What was it about their binding kinetics or their organization that would result in the structures that we see?"

Thawani was uniquely positioned to tackle these questions, having spent years studying chemical engineering and physics as well as molecular biology. She has essentially invented a new subspecialty in-between the three fields. "At the intersections between disciplines -- that's where the next, best science is," she said.

The eLife paper stands at that unusual crossroads: of the four authors, all except Thawani are principal investigators (PIs) of their own research labs, in three usually unrelated fields: Petry in biology; Stone in engineering; and Joshua Shaevitz, a professor of physics and the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics.

"I don't know of many examples where there is one first author and then three PIs," said Petry. "I think that's a strength of Princeton. I don't know any other place where it's that easy to get three professors together to make a project happen."

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