MIT researchers tug at molecules with optical tweezers
MIT researchers have developed a novel technique to measure the strength of the bonds between two protein molecules important in cell machinery: Gently tugging them apart with light beams. "It's really giving us a molecular-level picture of what's going on," said Matthew Lang, an assistant professor of biological and mechanical engineering and senior author of a paper on the work appearing in the June 30 advanced online issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Last fall, Lang and others demonstrated that light beams could be used to pick up and move individual cells around the surface of a microchip.
Now they have applied the optical tweezers to measuring protein microarchitectures, allowing them to study the forces that give cells their structure and the ability to move.
The researchers focused on proteins that bind to actin filaments, an important component of the cytoskeleton. Depending on the arrangement and interaction of actin filaments, they can provide structural support, help the cell crawl across a surface or sustain a load (in muscle cells).
"We're trying to understand how nature engineered these molecular linkages to use in different ways," said Lang.
Actin filaments are most commonly found either bonded or crosslinked by a much smaller actin binding protein.
The researchers studied the interactions between the proteins by pinning one actin filament to a surface and controlling the motion of the second one with a beam of light. As the researchers tug on a bead attached to the second filament, the bond mediated by the actin-binding protein eventually breaks.
With this technique, the researchers can get a precise measurement of the force holding the proteins together, which is on the order of piconewtons (10^-12 newtons).
The same technique could be used to investigate many of the other hundreds of protein interactions that occur in the cytoskeleton, said Lang.
Source: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Related
- Using molecules to measure rate of flowMon, 29 Sep 2008, 10:36:30 EDT
- Tethered molecules act as light-driven reversible nanoswitchesMon, 23 Jun 2008, 19:22:41 EDT
- Researchers shed new light on catalyzed reactionsWed, 19 Nov 2008, 15:50:40 EST
- Hs and OHs in the spotlightSat, 24 May 2008, 14:35:45 EDT
- Argonne scientists use lasers to align moleculesTue, 13 May 2008, 13:14:39 EDT
Share
Other sources
- Researchers tug at molecules with optical tweezersfrom PhysorgMon, 30 Jun 2008, 17:28:49 EDT
- Using a light touch to measure protein bondsfrom MIT ResearchMon, 30 Jun 2008, 17:07:11 EDT
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Next article
Wake up and smell the coffeePrevious article
Carbon hoofprint: Cows supplemented with rbST reduce agriculture's environmental impactLatest breaking news
- Mountaineers measure lowest human blood oxygen levels on recordWed, 7 Jan 2009, 17:36:38 EST
- Half of world's population could face climate-induced food crisis by 2100Thu, 8 Jan 2009, 14:36:42 EST
- Scientists call up stem cell troops to repair the body using new drug combinationsThu, 8 Jan 2009, 10:30:11 EST
Popular science news articles
- Astronomers discover new radio signal using large balloon
- New tool enables powerful data analysis
- First Americans arrived as 2 separate migrations, according to new genetic evidence
- Study shows California's autism increase not due to better counting, diagnosis
- Chemopreventive agents in black raspberries identified
- New tool enables powerful data analysis
- Spirituality is key to kids' happiness
- Scientists call up stem cell troops to repair the body using new drug combinations
- Rice University psychologist finds women's brains recognize, encode smell of male sexual sweat
- First Americans arrived as 2 separate migrations, according to new genetic evidence
- Health-monitoring technology helps seniors live at home longer, MU researchers find
- Old gastrointestinal drug slows aging, McGill researchers say
- New tool enables powerful data analysis
- 'Recovery coaches' effective in reducing number of babies exposed to drugs
- New genetic markers for ulcerative colitis identified, researchers report in Nature Genetics
- Brain starvation as we age appears to trigger Alzheimer's
- Facial expressions of emotion are innate, not learned, says new study
- Sugar can be addictive, Princeton scientist says
- Doctors issue warning about the danger of heavy toilet seats to male toddlers
- MRI brain scans accurate in early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease