Mar 05, 2015
Biomolecular force generation based on the principle of a gas spring
The mechanical basis of mitosis has only been understood in
fragments so far. Scientists at Technische Universität Dresden
have now been able to add another piece to the puzzle of cell
biological mechanisms, as they report in the latest issue of
the renowned scientific journal “Cell” on March 5, 2015.
When cells divide, their genetic information is passed on to
both daughter cells in a highly complex process. Thereby, an
important role is played by small, cylindrical protein tubes,
called microtubules. They form the scaffold of the spindle
apparatus helping to distribute the genome in the chromosomes
to the two daughter cells when cells divide. Besides their
mission of docking onto the chromosomes directly and pulling
them apart, microtubules are also of great importance for
stabilizing the spindle apparatus. To this end the microtubules
overlap at the centre of the cell, connecting the opposite
spindle poles. When cells divide, it can be observed that these
overlapping microtubules are initially made to slide in
relation to one another by so-called motor proteins, but then
stop before actually separating. Until now, scientists have
only been able to explain the mechanism that inhibits their
movement and stops the sliding in parts.
In cooperation with scientists from the Netherlands (Wageningen
University and AMOLF), an international group of scientists
around Professor Dr. Stefan Diez (Heisenberg Professor at ZIK B
CUBE – Center for Molecular Bioengineering at TU Dresden, and
group leader at the Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell
Biology and Genetics) has now been able to show that a
well-known principle of physics is also relevant in biology:
Weakly binding proteins which preferably accumulate between
overlapping microtubules behave like diffusing gas particles in
a closed container. Those gas particles respond with rising
pressure to a reduction in volume. This simple principle, as
familiar from the ideal gas law as it is from common household
bicycle pumps, is also how the weakly binding proteins create
an ever growing counter-pressure between the overlapping
microtubules as they slide apart. This causes the movement to
decelerate and stops the sliding. This biomolecular mechanism
corresponds to the principle of a gas spring .
The scientists have been able to demonstrate this mechanism in
experiment and theory. They have also successfully managed to
directly measure the resulting forces by means of optical
tweezers. And they have finally been able to show that the
gas-like pressure of the weakly binding proteins is strong
enough to compensate the power of the motor proteins and keep
the overlapping microtubules from falling apart.
This not only means that a minimal mechanism for stabilizing
overlapping microtubules has been found and experimentally
proven, but also that a further generally applicable mechanism
has been added to the repertoire of cell biological mechanisms
of action.
The study was published online in the renowned scientific
journal "Cell" on 5 March 2015 and will appear in the printed
issue on 12 March 2015.
Original publication:
Zdenek Lansky, Marcus Braun, Annemarie Lüdecke, Michael
Schlierf, Pieter Rein ten Wolde, Marcel E Janson, Stefan Diez,
Diffusible crosslinkers generate directed forces in microtubule
networks, DOI:10.1016/j.cell.2015.01.051
Caption: The expansion of
compressed, weakly bound proteins (green) leads to a force
that causes the directional movement of two overlapping
microtubules against one another. The upper part of the
figure shows a schematic diagram of the movement of two
overlapping microtubules (red and orange) in combination
with typical fluorescence microscopy images. The lower part
of the figure shows a gas spring, the macroscopic
counterpart of the biomolecular system, where gas is
compressed by the impact of an external force and expands
again later as soon as the external force is reduced.
(Stefan Diez, ZIK B Cube).
About B CUBE at the TU Dresden
The Center for Innovation Competence (ZIK) B CUBE – Center
for Molecular Bioengineering was founded in 2008 in conjunction
with funding by the BMBF-program „Unternehmen Region“. The
center is dedicated to investigate and engineer biological
materials along the three main axes BioProspecting, BioNano
Tools and Biomimetic Materials, thereby contributing
significantly to the profile of the TU Dresden in the fields of
modern biotechnology and biomedicine.
Information for journalists:
Prof. Dr. Stefan Diez
Heisenberg-Professur für BioNanoWerkzeuge
Technische Universität Dresden
ZIK B CUBE – Center for Molecular Bioengineering
Phone.: +49 (0)351 463-43010
Fax: +49 (0)351 463-40322
http://www.tu-dresden.de/bcube