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2010 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Structure of nascent peptides and kinetic control of co-translational folding on the ribosome

KOMAR Anton (USA)

Center for Gene Regulation in Health and Disease - Dept. of Biology - Cleveland - USA

RODNINA Marina (GERMANY)

Dept. of Physical Biochemistry - Max Planck Institute of Biophysical Chemistry - Goettingen - GERMANY

SCHWALBE Harald (GERMANY)

Institute for Organic Chemistry and Chemical Biology - Center for Biomolecular Magnetic Resonance (BMRZ) - Frankfurt - GERMANY

For any protein to function properly, the polypeptide chain produced by the ribosome, the protein-synthesizing factory of the cell, has to fold into the correct three-dimensional structure. Protein folding in the cell starts while the growing peptide chain is still bound to the ribosome. The information on the sequence of amino acids of the protein is stored in the sequence of codons in the messenger RNA (mRNA). The ribosome reads the mRNA codons one by one and translates them into the sequence of amino acids of the protein. Not all codons are read with the same speed: periods of rapid translation are separated by pauses. The role of such pauses is not known, but interfering with a fine-tuned rhythm of translation causes incorrect folding of proteins which can lead to disease. Translation rates may be changed by synonymous mutations in the mRNA, i.e. mutations that do not change the meaning of a codon in terms of which amino acid to be incorporated, but affect the speed by which the codon is translated. The goal of this project is to understand how nascent proteins fold while being synthesized on the ribosome and how the speed of translation affects their folding. Fluorescent reporters introduced at defined positions in the nascent protein will allow us to distinguish the unfolded, partially folded, and fully folded protein as it is produced by the ribosome. By determining, in real time, the hierarchy by which the structural elements in the protein are formed, we will delineate the protein´s co-translational folding pathway and compare it to the folding properties of the completed protein when it is released from the ribosome. By introducing synonymous mutations in the mRNA, we will examine how translational pausing affects folding. We will also determine the structure and dynamics of independent folding units in the growing peptide. The work requires an interdisciplinary approach that combines the expertise in molecular biology, biochemistry, biophysics, and structural biology. The results will provide important insight into the mechanism of protein folding in the cell. Furthermore, the work will contribute to better understanding the origin of human diseases caused by incorrect protein folding and give a tool to upscale the production of functional proteins for medical and biotechnological purposes.

2010 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Dynamical coordination in a multi-domain, peptide antibiotic mega-synthetase

KOMATSUZAKI Tamiki (JAPAN)

Research Institute for Electronic Science - Molecule & Life Nonlinear Sciences - Sapporo - JAPAN

MOOTZ Henning D. (GERMANY)

Department of Chemistry and Pharmacy, Chair of Biotechnology and Cellular Biochemistry - Institut for Biochemistry - Münster - GERMANY

YANG Haw (USA)

Dept. of Chemistry - Princeton University - Princeton - USA

Many clinically important antibiotics are peptide natural products of great structural complexity made by bacteria or fungi. The biosynthesis is achieved by nonribosomal peptide synthetases (NRPS), in which catalytic subunits and carrier domains form an assembly line-like mega-enzyme and interact in a coordinated way to achieve a directed product assembly via covalently bound intermediates. As such, a fundamental mechanistic understanding of these remarkable molecular machines will have direct implications in the rational design of novel synthetic pathways by biocombinatorial approaches. Large-amplitude conformational transitions have been identified and are likely to play a central role in the apparent directionality of the stepwise peptide assembly within the NRPS. Two conceptually distinct hypotheses have been proposed for triggering the conformational changes: They could be driven by chemical-reaction directed interactions between the individual domains with well-defined protein conformations or, alternatively, they could be promoted by Brownian random movements that eventually lead to productive interactions. Using these two still highly speculative models as guide, this proposal is intended to dissect the multi-step enzymatic reactions and clarify the mechanistic roles of large-amplitude conformational transitions. Specifically, we aim (1) to monitor the sub-domain dynamics in the adenylation domain, (2) to monitor the domain-domain interactions between the adenylation and the peptidyl carrier domain, and (3) to monitor the dynamical domain coordination of a minimal NRPS in real time. We will apply single-molecule FRET spectroscopy to this kind of multi-domain mega-synthetases for the first time. We will also develop new techniques for site-specific protein labeling and new data-driven statistical analysis methods to interpret the data. An international research consortium consisting of leading research groups in chemical biology (Germany), single-molecule spectroscopy (US), and mathematical physics (Japan) is formed to tackle this challenging yet fundamentally important problem. This will be a new research direction for all three participating labs and it will be impossible for any one of the groups to achieve the aims working alone.

2010 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Odor recognition in natural environments: Bayesian inference from insects to mammals

LOUIS Matthieu (BELGIUM)

Dept. of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology - University of California, Santa Barbara - Santa Barbara - USA

MAINEN Zachary (USA)

Systems Neuroscience Lab. - Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown - Lisboa - PORTUGAL

POUGET Alexandre (FRANCE)

Département des Neurosciences fondamentales - University of Geneva - Geneva - SWITZERLAND

Object recognition is a difficult computational task solved by the nervous system. For a wide range of organisms object recognition occurs predominantly using the chemical senses. Behaviorally significant odor sources must be faithfully recognized despite being composed of an often complex chemical signature and being embedded in a complex and dynamic chemical background. The present proposal aims to understand the neural mechanisms that make such computations possible.

Increasing evidence suggests that object recognition can be understood as a process of probabilistic (Bayesian) inference. Although this idea is already being exploited in the visual system, it has yet had little impact on the field of olfaction. Our central hypothesis is that odor stimuli are represented using a probabilistic population code, and that odor representations are processed in Bayesian optimal way by the nervous system. This problem requires at least two computational processes: integration, which underlies recognition of multi-component odor sources, and marginalization, which is essential for invariance to irrelevant background odors.

Using this probabilistic framework, we will develop computational models for integration and marginalization in the olfactory system and test them using parallel experiments in rats and in Drosophila larvae. The rat will provide a model system that can be probed using psychophysics and multi-electrode recordings, allowing us to study the neural basis of marginalization in populations of olfactory cortex neurons. The Drosophila larva will provide a model system with a nervous circuit amenable to genetic manipulations: using chemotaxis as a behavioral paradigm, we will using molecular perturbations to decompose olfactory input into elementary parts mediated by single odorant receptors.

The probabilistic framework will be used to design and interpret experiments which will themselves inform refinement of the theoretical hypotheses. By comparing across species, we will test for the existence of conserved, and possibly optimal, solutions to ubiquitous problem of the odor recognition in naturalistic olfactory environments. This project is based on computational and systems neuroscience and includes strong contributions of the fields of mathematics and statistics (Pouget), biophysics and fly molecular biology (Louis), psychology and physiology (Mainen).

2010 -
Grant Awardees - Program

An Interdisciplinary Approach to Understand the Development and Evolution of Leaf Shapes

PRUSINKIEWICZ Przemyslaw (CANADA)

Department of Computer Science - University of Calgary - Calgary - CANADA

TSIANTIS Miltos (GREECE)

Dept. of Comparative Development and Genetics - Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research - Cologne - GERMANY

Two key challenges in biology are to understand how biological forms are generated, and to elucidate the basis for their diversity. We propose to address these problems by studying the development and evolutionary diversification of leaf forms. To this end, we will integrate developmental genetics and computational modeling to compare, contrast, and put in an evolutionary context the mechanisms that shape the simple leaf of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and the compound subdivided leaf of its close relative Cardamine hirsuta. In addition to being taxonomically related, these plants show exceptional genetic tractability, thus providing excellent opportunities for comparative studies of leaf development and diversity.

We will characterize the spatiotemporal expression of key leaf-shape regulating genes and the activity of auxin during leaf development, and the influence of these genes on cell division, tissue growth and vein patterning. On this basis, we propose to devise models of A. thaliana and C. hirsuta leaf development. These models will integrate molecular-level signaling, the pattern of growth and division of individual cells, mechanical interactions between cells, and vein pattern formation. We will iteratively test, improve and validate the models by comparing them with experimental data for A. thaliana, C. hirsuta, and their mutants and transgenic variants. To conceptualize the diversity and evolution of leaf forms we will construct a morphospace with coordinates reflecting the activity of selected genes.

We expect to gain an understanding of the development, diversification, and evolution of leaf shapes in mechanistic terms including genetic regulation, developmental signaling, cell division and differentiation, and tissue growth. We will also advance the state of the art in plant modeling by introducing the propagating-boundary method to simulate development of organs, devising a representation of cellular structures developing in 3D, and modifying finite-element methods to efficiently capture the dynamics of growing 2D and 3D tissues and structures. All aspects of the proposed research have a collaborative, interdisciplinary character, bridging developmental biology and computational modeling.

2010 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Role of genetic interactions and recombination in experimental evolution of Caenorhabditis elegans

ROCKMAN Matthew (USA)

Dept. of Biology and Center for Genomics and Systems Biology - New York University - New York - USA

SHRAIMAN Boris (USA)

Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics and Dept. of Physics - University of California - Santa Barbara - USA

TEOTONIO Henrique (PORTUGAL)

Département de Biologie - Institut de Biologie de l'Ecole Normale Superieure - Paris - FRANCE

Adaptation from standing genetic variation is central to the evolution of phenotypes, yet its dependence on the molecular details that connect genotype, phenotype, and fitness is a major unsolved problem in genetics. The effect of recombination, in particular, is expected to depend on the extent of genetic interaction among alleles. While higher rate of recombination facilitates combinatorial exploration of the genotypic space, in the presence of interaction it also has a detrimental effect of breaking up synergistic combinations of alleles. We propose a multidisciplinary investigation of the roles of recombination and genetic interactions. We will study laboratory adaptation of C. elegans populations that start with high genetic variability and are engineered to have different rates of inbreeding and outcrossing. The project integrates experimentally determined genome-wide genotype distributions, multidimensional phenotype (gene expression) measurements, and fitness data across 100 generations of culture in laboratory populations that differ in their rates of outcrossing. This integration forms the empirical test bed for theoretical models of the role of genomic architecture in adaptation. In particular, we will test the predicted positive correlation among non-additive genetic effects and levels of linkage disequilibrium across the genome. The proposed work combines population genetics and high-throughput molecular biology approaches with statistical physics modeling methods, and aims to bridge population genetics with systems biology.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

RNA folding as a mediator of stress response in plants

ASSMANN Sarah M. (USA)

Dept. of Biology - The Pennsylvania State University - University Park - USA

BEVILACQUA Philip C. (USA)

Dept. of Chemistry - The Pennsylvania State University - University Park - USA

LILLEY David M. J. (UK)

Cancer Research UK Nucleic Acid Structure Research Group - University of Dundee - Dundee - UK

MAJOR Francois (CANADA)

Dept. of Computer Science and Operations Research - University of Montreal - Montreal - CANADA

Plants, either directly or as fodder for livestock, feed the world and are increasingly important sources of fuel and fiber. Unfortunately, approximately half of the global crop yield each year is lost as a result of adverse environmental conditions. Drought is the abiotic stress with the greatest impact on crop yield worldwide and is expected to be exacerbated by global climate change. Plant physiology is affected by a number of other stressors including salinity, heavy metal ions, and reactive oxygen species. During times of stress, osmolytes and potassium ions accumulate to high concentrations inside of plants. These species are known to generally affect the folding of RNA, which often alters gene expression. Our hypothesis is that plants use certain RNA and DNA switches as a way to sense stressors and their indicators, which subsequently alters gene expression. Several plants have been fully sequenced, including the model plant species Arabidopsis thaliana, which allows us to apply a full complement of bioinformatic, biochemical, biophysical, and biological approaches. Our overall approach includes discovery and characterization of RNA/DNA switches in plants, including new and novel classes of stress-responsive switches, using a combination of biologically and chemically motivated searches driven by bioinformatics and experiments. We will then characterize the structures and physical and chemical properties of these RNA/DNA elements both in vitro and in planta. Techniques to be applied include enzymatic and chemical structure mapping of the nucleic acid, mutagenesis, thermodynamics, single molecule studies, small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), and computation modeling. In addition, transgenic approaches will be used to assess the impact of RNA/DNA folding events on plant drought tolerance. Feasibility of this research plan is supported by initial bioinformatics searches and biochemical studies. These studies, if successful, will elucidate key mechanisms for how plants respond to stress at the cellular and molecular levels, and will likely help define mechanisms for gene regulation in response to stress in other eukaryotes.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Multiscale mechanisms of epithelial patterning and morphogenesis: theory and experiments

AUDOLY Basile (FRANCE)

Institut Jean le Rond d'Alembert - Université Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris 6) - PARIS CEDEX 05 - FRANCE

DAHMANN Christian (GERMANY)

Dept. of Biology - Institute for Genetics - Dresden - GERMANY

PISMEN Leonid (ISRAEL)

Dept. of Chemical Engineering - Technion - Israel Institute of Technology - Haifa - ISRAEL

SHVARTSMAN Stanislav (USA)

Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics - Princeton University - Princeton - USA

Folding of epithelial sheets is one of the most ancient mechanisms leading to the formation of three-dimensional structures in developing tissues. In a highly simplified picture, epithelial morphogenesis can be separated into two steps. First, inductive signals establish two-dimensional patterns of gene expression across the epithelia. At the next step, these patterns are converted into spatial patterns of force generation and mechanical properties of cells, thus controlling the folding of a sheet into a target morphology. Previous studies of epithelial morphogenesis focused on single genes and small networks, but a systems-level model of morphogenesis in any given experimental context is yet to be developed. In developing such a picture, the key questions are related to the number and identities of involved genes, diversity and dynamics of their expression patterns, mechanisms of pattern formation, and connection between patterning and morphogenesis. We will investigate these questions in the context of the formation of the Drosophila eggshell, an established genetic model of epithelial morphogenesis.

This will be the first time that genetics, systems biology, cell biology, nonlinear dynamics, and continuum mechanics will be brought together to study patterning and morphogenesis in a system highly amenable to genetic manipulations. We will establish a two-dimensional atlas for the expression of dozens of genes involved in eggshell morphogenesis and formulate quantitative models for the formation of these patterns by signaling pathways. Based on live imaging and genetic experiments, we will formulate the hypotheses regarding the connection between patterns of gene expression and the mechanical properties of patterned epithelia. We will explore these hypotheses computationally, using a continuum mechanics approach, and experimentally, using live imaging. The result of this integrative approach will be the first experimentally validated systems-level model for two-dimensional epithelial patterning and resulting folding into a target three-dimensional morphology.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Neuronal Connectivity: Unraveling the Cell-Surface Recognition Code

BAIER Herwig (GERMANY)

Dept. Genes - Circuits - Behavior - Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology - Martinsried - GERMANY

TRAUNER Dirk (AUSTRIA)

Department of Chemistry - New York University - New York - USA

WRIGHT Gavin (UK)

Cell Surface Signalling Lab. - Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute - Cambridge - UK

It is largely unknown how specific connections are established among the hundreds of cell types of the vertebrate CNS. Previous work has implicated cell adhesion molecules of the immunoglobulin, cadherin, and other families as mediators of this process. We have formed a collaborative network to explore a new gene family encoding leucine-rich repeat transmembrane (Lrrtm) cell-surface receptors. Individual members of the Lrrtm family are expressed in mutually exclusive patterns in the retina and tectum of zebrafish. The specific aims are 1) to establish a molecular interaction network for the Lrrtm family using biochemistry and biophysics (G. Wright), 2) to characterize the expression patterns of Lrrtm receptor/ligand pairs in the visual system of zebrafish using two-color fluorescent RNA in situ hybridzations and monoclonal antibodies (Wright & Baier), 3) to test if Lrrtms are necessary and/or sufficient for synaptic specificity by creating loss-of-function mutants, taking advantage of the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute mutation resource, and by generating transgenic lines able to drive expression of Lrrtms and their genetically engineered variants in subsets of neurons (Baier & Wright), and finally 4) to identify the exact developmental step at which Lrrtms act (Trauner, Baier, & Wright). For this last experiment, we will genetically engineer an Lrrtm that can be masked with a photolabile, chemical compound and “unmasked” with ultraviolet light. We will remove the mask at defined time points before, during, and after synapse formation to determine if Lrrtms are required for neurite guidance, cell-cell recognition, synapse formation, and/or synapse consolidation. Together, these experiments will reveal the function of a novel candidate gene family in neuronal connectivity and will devise a broadly applicable paradigm for the study of other signalling systems in the developing nervous system and beyond.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

First encounters of pathogens with the host: Fundamentals of pathogen recognition and killing

BARRON Annelise E. (USA)

Dept. of Bioengineering - Stanford University - STANFORD - USA

HAAGSMAN Henk P. (NETHERLANDS)

Dept. of Infectious Diseases and Immunology - Universiteit Utrecht - UTRECHT - NETHERLANDS

Every day humans and animals are exposed to harmful micro-organisms, yet do not become ill. If you think about it, this is remarkable. We generally consider the absence of disease as not very exciting, and often research in infection biology is done with the aim to cure a disease or to prevent disease by development of specific vaccines. We propose to study the efficient systems that become involved to protect the host at the most vulnerable sites of the body. Mechanical barriers, innate immune receptors, and the adaptive immune system play a vital role in protecting the host from pathogenic invaders that attack the skin, lungs or gastro-intestinal tract. However, before the protection of the innate immune receptors kicks in, another “line of defence” seems to provide immediate protection. This protective system consists of peptides and proteins (“Innate Immune Effector Proteins”, IIEP), that are either soluble or loosely attached to mucus and other extracellular structures, and that exert direct effects (aggregation, killing) on a variety of pathogens ranging from viruses to fungi. Among these fascinating molecules, which appear to have largely physical mechanisms of action, are small antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) as well as large “pattern recognition” proteins such as the collectins. Our aim is to observe (for the first time) and subsequently analyze and understand the first encounters of pathogens with host proteins in the ARENA, a microfluidic model system that will mimic the interface between host and outside world. Our model system will mimic the air-water interface of mammalian lungs, and will contain bioluminescent bacteria that will encounter the lung collectins SP-A and SP-D plus the defensin hBD-1 and the cathelicidin LL-37. The ARENA chip device will permit carefully controlled on-chip dilutions of protein mixtures, bacteria (and host cells) by merging a stream carrying bacteria with a stream of IIEP to form a dynamic interface. Time lapse video microscopy is used to track aggregation and death of bacteria by fluorescent markers. Multiple tests per chip under multiple conditions can be run simultaneously.

Hypotheses: 1. The assembly state of collectins determines the propensity to quickly immobilize invading pathogens. 2. Concerted actions of collectins with AMPs kill bacteria effectively and protect the airways from biofilm formation.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

The molecular dynamics and imaging of Eph receptor-guided cell positioning in tissue assembly.

BASTIAENS Philippe (NETHERLANDS)

Dept. of Systemic Cell Biology - Max Planck Institute of Molecular Physiology - Dortmund - GERMANY

LACKMANN Martin (AUSTRALIA)

Dept. of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology/Protein Interaction & Cancer Research Lab - Monash University - Clayton - AUSTRALIA

NEEL Benjamin G. (CANADA)

- Laura and Isaac Perlmutter Cancer Center - New York - USA

PAWSON Anthony James (CANADA)

Samuel Lunenfeld Research Institute - Mount Sinai Hospital - Toronto - CANADA

A challenge in elucidating the signaling networks that control the organization of mammalian cells into tissues lies in the complexity of the whole organism, which limits analysis at molecular resolution. We propose to bridge this gap in scale between cell signaling networks and collective cell behaviour during tissue morphogenesis, by studying in experimental models of increasing complexity EphB2/ephrinB1-controlled cell positioning during vasculogenesis. Specifically, we will achieve this goal by integrated use of:

- novel phosphoproteomics strategies for unbiased elucidation of phosphotyrosine (PY)/

protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP)-signaling networks

- novel strategies for analyzing PTPs, and high-resolution imaging of biosensor-tagged

Eph/ephrin signaling nodes during vasculogenesis.

Functional phosphoproteomics of metabolic (SILAC) labeled Eph+ or ephrin+ cells, and identification of ROS-oxidised PTP’s, will survey PTP-controlled PY signaling during Eph/ephrin-facilitated cell navigation, while distinguishing between distinct cell populations. Genetically encoded optical sensors for Eph/ephrin and PTP signaling activities will allow recording the correlation between bidirectional Eph/ephrin signaling activity within cells and the assembly of tissue during vasculogenesis. The underlying experimental models, with a common concept of confronting Eph-expressing with ephrin-expressing cells, will increase in complexity from simple 2-D co-culture and in-vitro capillary tube formation, to ‘confrontation’ cultures between tumour- and ES cell- spheroids to trigger in-vitro neoangiogenesis. Finally, modification of selected endogenous proteins in ES cells with fluorescent tags and biosensors by homologous recombination will allow assessment of emerging endogenous signalling clusters during ES cell differentiation.

Overall, these strategies will elucidate the molecular concepts underlying self-organized tissue assembly and will provide the experimental platform and knowledge base for our long-term goal - to assess at molecular resolution, but in the context of a whole animal, a signaling circuit controlling tissue patterning. Eph RTKs, as one of the principal signaling systems that control developmental cell navigation through feed-back controlled bi-directional signaling circuits, provide an ideal paradigm and experimental model system for this strategy.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Cheating the cold. How do Antarctic fishes use antifreeze to survive in ice-laden water?

BRIMBLE Margaret (NEW ZEALAND)

School of Chemical Sciences - The University of Auckland - Auckland - NEW ZEALAND

DEVRIES Arthur (USA)

Dept. of Animal Biology - University of Illinois - Urbana - USA

Freezing avoidance in Antarctic fishes is enabled by the presence of antifreeze glycoproteins (AFGPs) in most of their body fluids, but how they deal with circulating ice remains unresolved. We have shown that AFGPs are synthesized in the exocrine pancreas and the anterior stomach and secreted into the gut, where they serve in defence against imbibed ice. We have also identified high levels of AFGPs in the blood, where they defend against ice crystal growth in the circulation. In this investigation we will combine biology with synthetic organic chemistry to address how AFGPs get from the gut into the blood and how fishes remove circulating ice.

To determine how AFGPs traffic from the gut to the blood, we will synthesise fluorescently-labelled AFGPs and use confocal microscopy to visualize the pathway of uptake following oral intubation. Mass spectrometry of blood samples obtained after the introduction of isotopically-labelled AFGPs will be undertaken to confirm translocation from the gut to the circulation.

We postulate that removal of ice from the circulation occurs in the spleen via a receptor-dependent interaction involving ice-bound antifreeze. Recently, we have identified a second antifreeze protein, termed antifreeze potentiating protein (AFPP), which also adsorbs to ice. This new observation leads us to hypothesize that the adsorption of both types of antifreeze is required for the recognition and removal of circulating ice.

To identify the AFGP receptor and the cell involved, we will prepare dual function orthogonally-labelled AFGP probes containing a UV-activatable cross-linker that will covalently bind to the putative receptor on photoactivation. An azide chemical reporter group will also be incorporated into the AFGP probe to enable the use of “click chemistry” to attach a biotin-conjugate to the cross-linked putative AFGP receptor. The receptor will be identified following streptavidin affinity chromatography of cell membrane extracts prepared following the culture of spleen cells in the presence of excess probe. Such probes, in conjunction with routine cytological analysis, will also enable us to identify the cell type involved. Following complete characterization of AFPP we will attempt synthesis and similar modifications to identify its receptor. Taken together with knowledge of the pathway of AFGPs to the blood, we will finally have a complete picture of the mechanism of organismal freezing avoidance.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Decoding and Recoding Sensation

BRODY Carlos D. (USA)

Princeton Neuroscience Institute and Dept. of Molecular Biology - Princeton University - Princeton - USA

CALLAWAY Edward (USA)

Systems Neurobiology Labs - The Salk Institute for Biological Sciences - La Jolla - USA

DIAMOND Mathew (ITALY)

Tactile Perception and Learning Lab - International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA) - Trieste - ITALY

PETERSEN Carl (UK)

Laboratory of Sensory Processing - Brain Mind Institute, Faculty of Life Science - Lausanne - SWITZERLAND

The activity of nerve cells in behaving animals correlates with sensory processing, decisions and motor control. Such correlations are necessary, but not sufficient, to link specific aspects of brain activity to behaviour. In order to obtain causal evidence it is critical to manipulate identified neuronal circuits in the brain during behaviour. This demanding goal is the objective of this research program, where as a team we will develop, test and apply genetic technology for highly specific control of neuronal networks in the mammalian brain which will be quantitatively related to behavioural report of sensory perception. Edward Callaway of the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California will develop genetic tools for specifically controlling the activity of well-defined populations of cells in the rodent brain. Carl Petersen of the Brain Mind Institute in Lausanne, Switzerland and Mathew Diamond of the International School for Advanced Studies in Trieste, Italy will use these genetic tools to analyse the neuronal basis of perception through simultaneous measurement and manipulation of cortical activity during performance of tactile detection and discrimination tasks. Carlos Brody of Princeton University will carry out information theoretic analysis and neuronal network simulation necessary for quantitative evaluation of causal relationships between neuronal activity and behavioural report of perception. Together this team of investigators aims to provide pioneering evidence for different functional roles of the diverse types of neurons found in the neocortex. Furthermore, the rigorous testing of such genetic technology in vivo in the mammalian brain will provide an important step towards the many potential clinical applications for treating brain disorders.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

In search of conserved mRNA localization and anchoring mechanisms

BROWN Christopher M. (NEW ZEALAND)

Dept. of Biochemisty - University of Otago - DUNEDIN - NEW ZEALAND

MACARA Ian G. (USA)

Dept. of Cell and Developmental Biology - Vanderbilt University Medical Center - Nashville - USA

SPANG Anne (GERMANY)

Dept. of Biochemistry-Growth and Development - University of Basel - Basel - SWITZERLAND

Living cells must be highly organized, therefore many of their components are transported to particular places and anchored there. Disruptions in this transport and localization cause disease, particularly neuropathologies. Many copies of proteins are made from each working copy of a gene (messenger RNAs, mRNAs). Proteins are moved to their correct location or, more efficiently, made there from mRNAs that have been moved. Although the mechanisms that move proteins to their destinations have been intensively investigated, those that carry mRNAs have been much less studied. Indeed, RNAs have recently been discovered to participate in a growing number of new roles and unexpected qualities in cells.

The molecular “zip codes” hidden in RNAs that specify destinations have only been deciphered for a few RNAs. An important goal of this project is to create intelligent methods that can find these codes. Here we will address fundamental unanswered biological questions- are many or just a few key RNAs localized? How many different zip codes exist? Have these codes been conserved through evolution? Are transport codes and anchoring codes identical or separable? Does localization change on insult or in disease?

Through an international collaboration we now have a unique opportunity to answer these questions. In mammalian cells, genome-wide screening has provided us with a large set of mRNAs that localize to cell protrusions and axonal growth cones. In yeast, we have identified a set of mRNAs unexpectedly bound to membranes. These data offer an unrivaled opportunity to develop new computer programs for zip code identification, and to refine these methods by testing predictions with experiment. We will also investigate the evolutionary conservation of the zip codes from yeast to man. By combining the diverse expertise of a cell biologist, a yeast geneticist, and a computer scientist, we are in a unique position to uncover fundamental principles of mRNA localization. Our ultimate goal is to unravel a fundamental dictionary of RNA zip codes.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Sensitive molecular imaging of in situ axonal pathfinding mechanisms by low-level probe trapping

BRUCHEZ Marcel P. (USA)

Dept. of Chemistry and Molecular Biosensors and Imaging Center - Carnegie Mellon University - Pittsburgh - USA

HOLT Christine (UK)

Dept. of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience - University of Cambridge - Cambridge - UK

WOUTERS Fred S. (NETHERLANDS)

Lab. of Molecular and Cellular Systems - Dept. of Physiology and Pathophysiology - Goettingen - GERMANY

Axons of retinal ganglion neurons traverse molecularly distinct territories and choice points on their way to the optic tectum. The navigational behavior of their growth cones is governed by extracellular guidance factors that elicit chemotropic responses through local protein synthesis and degradation. Cyclic nucleotide signaling modulates these processes to allow response switching. Little is known about the orchestration of molecular mechanisms in axonal navigation, mainly due to a lack of intracellular real-time assays. In isolated neurons and the Xenopus brain, we wish to study how guidance cues are interpreted and integrated by the growth cone to produce the desired behavior. For this, we will apply a novel optical sensor paradigm that can offer a detailed quantitative view of the molecular navigation reactions in the growing tip, while minimizing possible deleterious effects of the introduction of sensor constructs. These approaches will be used to generate uniquely high-content information on the key reactions of local protein translation, folding, and proteasomal degradation. These powerful tools and highly interdisciplinary approaches will allow the dynamic dissection in vitro and in vivo of molecular events elicited by extracellular signals, and the molecular functional definition of their interplay at key choice points in the visual pathway where axons change their behavior in response to changes in guidance cues.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Cell-to-cell propagation of neurodegenerative disease-linked protein aggregates

BRUNDIN Patrik (SWEDEN)

Neuronal Survival Unit, Dept. of Experimental Medical Science - Lund University - Lund - SWEDEN

KOPITO Ron R. (USA)

Dept. of Biology - Stanford University - Stanford - USA

MELKI Ronald (FRANCE)

Enzymology and Structural Biochemistry Lab. - CNRS - Gif-sur-Yvette - FRANCE

We propose to bring together an international and intercontinental team of biophysicists, cell biologists and neuroscientists to investigate the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which large proteinaceous aggregates can cross biological membranes. We propose three specific research aims. First, we will use state-of-the-art technology to understand the properties of protein aggregates that endow them with membrane-penetrating properties. The second aim seeks to determine the extent to which internalized aggregates can move between cells within a tissue and the role of endocytic, autophagic and cytoskeletal processes. Third, we propose to assess the extent to which protein aggregates can nucleate the aggregation of endogenous proteins within the brains of specially engineered mouse lines, and determine the role of motor-based axonal transport in this process. Together, this highly collaborative project seeks to understand the fundamental cellular and molecular basis for a newly discovered phenomenon that may play a critical role in the pathogenesis of diverse conformational diseases.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Two-photon monitoring and modulation of cerebrovasculature and neuronal excitability

CHARPAK Serge (FRANCE)

Neurophysiology & New Microscopies Lab. - Paris Descartes University - Paris - FRANCE

ELLIS-DAVIES Graham (USA)

Dept of Neuroscience - Mount Sinai School of Medicine - New York - USA

MACVICAR Brian (CANADA)

Brain Research Centre/Dept. of Psychiatry - University of British Columbia - Vancouver - CANADA

The control of cerebral vessel diameter is of fundamental importance in maintaining healthy brain function because it is critical to match cerebral blood flow to the metabolic demand of active neurons. The hypothesis that we will test is that astrocytes are essential communicators between blood vessels and neurons to regulate cerebral blood flow. Although there are numerous data indicating that astrocytes have critical roles in these processes there are still outstanding questions and critical gaps in our knowledge. A key shortcoming in previous studies is the difficulty to selectively activate neurons versus astrocytes. This grant will fund research to develop and apply the necessary tools for two photon uncaging and imaging in vivo. This team will apply novel two photon uncaging approaches in the cortex in vivo to address fundamental questions of how astrocytes signaling can alter cerebral blood vessels. A major question concerning the roles of astrocytes in the regulation of cerebral blood flow is the mechanism by which astrocytes are induced to cause either constrictions or dilations as a result of calcium transients. It is clear that astrocytes have the ability to induce either response in adjacent blood vessels. A recent study from MacVicar’s lab using a new two photon sensitive caged calcium (DMNPE-4) from Ellis-Davis’ lab has shown that the metabolic state of the surrounding tissue determines the polarity of the astrocyte influence on blood vessel diameter. This was determined in studies in brain slices in which oxygen levels and metabolic controls could be rigorously controlled and manipulated. The major pressing issue is to test these mechanisms described in brain slice studies using in vivo experiments. This collaborative effort will provide the expertise to do this. The Charpak lab has years of experience examining two photon signals in the olfactory bulb in vivo. The MacVicar and Charpak labs will combine efforts to examine astrocyte effects on blood vessel dynamics in the cortex and olfactory bulb in vivo. They will use new caged probes developed by the Ellis-Davis’ lab. New probes are necessary to provide the sensitivity that is required for in vivo photolysis and to provide new compounds to be uncaged for these investigations.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Understanding supramolecular architectures in photosynthesis by space and time resolved spectroscopy

COGDELL Richard J. (UK)

Dept. of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology - University of Glasgow - Glasgow - UK

HASHIMOTO Hideki (JAPAN)

Dept. of Physics - Osaka City University - Osaka - JAPAN

MOORE Thomas A. (USA)

Center for Bioenergy and Photosynthesis, Depts of Chemistry and Biochemistry - Arizona State University - Tempe - USA

POLLI Dario (ITALY)

Dept. of Physics - Politecnico di Milano - Milano - ITALY

70% of mankind’s current energy needs are met by burning fossil fuels. This is already problematic since oil and gas supplies are limited and because of the adverse environmental effects of rising levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Moreover this situation is set to get worse as current predictions estimate that our energy needs will double by 2050. Mankind is therefore facing a major challenge to find new sources of clean renewable fuels. Photosynthesis is a biological process able to use solar energy to produce such fuels. The essence of photosynthesis can be described in terms of the following three partial reactions: light harvesting, charge separation, and electron transfer to take electrons from water in order to reduce carbon dioxide to carbohydrate (a fuel).

Since solar energy at the earth’s surface is rather diffuse, any artificial system designed to convert it into a fuel will need to incorporate a light-harvesting or light-concentration step. The first question any engineer would ask is: what is the design tolerance of such a system? How much architectural flexibility is possible while still retaining both high efficiency light-harvesting and energy delivery to the ‘sink’, where that energy can be productively utilized? The project addresses this problem by interrogating natural light-harvesting systems with sophisticated spectroscopic and microscopic techniques, which can tell us how their supra-molecular, meso-scale architecture relates to their overall light-harvesting efficiency.

We use as model complexes purple bacteria, which are very simple photosynthetic organisms, for which the structure and function of individual native light-harvesting complexes have been identified. We will first investigate native membranes of purple bacteria by the combined use of time- and space-resolved spectroscopies, in order to correlate their local organization with their light-harvesting function. We will then use this information to begin to construct arrays of artificial light-harvesting complexes, based on synthetic analogues of natural pigments, on surfaces where we can control supra-molecular architecture. Such arrays can, in the long term, be used in devices for producing solar fuels.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Physiological forces in LN development and function: Engineering an Artificial Lymph Node.

COLES Mark C. (UK)

Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology - University of Oxford - Oxford - UK

CUPEDO Tom (NETHERLANDS)

Dept. of Hematology - Erasmus University Medical Center - Rotterdam - NETHERLANDS

STROOCK Abraham (USA)

Dept. of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering - Cornell University - Ithaca - USA

During mammalian embryogenesis, mesenchymal cells differentiate into stromal lymph node organizer cells (LNo). In the course of a continuous differentiation program, LNo specialize into stromal cells that specifically accommodating either T or B cell clustering, this process forms the characteristic cellular architecture of secondary lymphoid organs. Gene-targeted mice have provided insight into the hematopoietic cells interacting with stromal cells during their differentiation, and several of the molecules essential for this process have been elucidated. However, in vivo studies are intrinsically limited in their ability to allow for the simultaneous and tightly controlled manipulation of multiple cells and signals. In this project, we will develop artificial lymph node (ALN) environments in vitro that will allow us to study the complex cellular and molecular networks underlying LN organogenesis with unprecedented control. Using the ALN environments, we will unravel 1) Minimal cellular and molecular requirements for LN development; 2) Organization of stromal cells into distinct T and B cell specific areas and 3) A role for non-paracrine forces including mechanical stresses, oxygen tension, cell movement and extracellular matrix remodeling in development of LNs. To achieve this, 3D remoldable collagen scaffolds will be microfabricated that capture the anatomy of the developing LN microenvironment. The scaffolds will be seeded with appropriate human or mouse cells and connected to externally controlled fluidics to allow for direct modulation of the cellular (LTi, stroma, lymphocytes) and chemical (signalling molecules, inhibitors) microenvironments within the scaffold at any given time. Additionally, this approach will allow for direct modulation of physiological forces (oxygen, shear stress and wall tension). Seeded cells will be allowed to differentiate and organize while these parameters are varied. Stromal cells, LTi cells, lymphocytes and the extracellular matrix will be monitored in situ by real time 4D multicolour imaging and cells will be harvested from the scaffolds such that gene expression signatures between different conditions can be measured and compared and correlated with imaging results. From this data we will develop both physiological and genomic maps of LN formation and generate fully functional ALNs, providing a unique platform to study LN development and function in real time and allow visualization and modulation of biological and pathological processes.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Serotonin and decision-making: integrating interspecies experimental and computational approaches

COOLS Roshan (NETHERLANDS)

Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging - Radboud University Medical Center - Nijmegen - NETHERLANDS

DAW Nathaniel D. (USA)

Center for Neural Science & Dept of Psychology - New York University - NEW YORK - USA

NAKAMURA Kae (JAPAN)

Dept. of Physiology - Kansai Medical University, School of Medicine - Moriguchi City - JAPAN

Serotonin (5HT), like dopamine (DA), has long been implicated in the control of behavior, including decision-making and reinforcement learning (RL). Its relevance for behavior is illustrated by its implication in a variety of neuropsychiatric disorders ranging from affective disorders such as anxiety and depression to impulse control disorders. However, while the two neuromodulators are tightly related and have a similar degree of functional and clinical importance, compared to DA, we have a much less specific understanding about the mechanisms by which 5HT affects behavior. We address this issue by leveraging existing understanding of DA and a constellation of methods that has shed light on DA function: integrating functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), psychopharmacology and neuronal recordings in behaving nonhuman and human primates, all guided by computational theory. We will test, and ultimately revise, a hypothesis that 5HT biases decision-making through an interaction with dopaminergic RL mechanisms.

Specifically, we will test the hypothesis that 5HT and DA have coordinated effects that serve to couple multiple axes that might otherwise be expected to have independent effects on decision making. We will manipulate different axes in behavior independently in a learned decision-making task, using functional neuroimaging in humans and neuronal recordings from DA and 5HT nuclei in monkeys to study correlations between neural activity and behavioral context. We will also assess the neuromodulators’ causal roles, by manipulating DA and 5HT in the same task and studying the effects on behavior and neural activity.

To maximize the comparability of the data, we will use experimental procedures as close to identical as practical between species, and use computational models in data analysis to bridge different levels of measurement. Experiments will be grounded in and quantitatively analyzed using current theoretical RL models, and will in turn inform the revision of these models.

2009 -
Grant Awardees - Program

Mechanoregulation of nuclear architecture and genome function: A novel mechanism in stem cell fate

CREMER Thomas (GERMANY)

Dept. of Biology II - Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München - Martinsried/Munich - GERMANY

DISCHER Dennis E. (USA)

Biophysical Engineering Lab. - University of Pennsylvania - Philadelphia - USA

LEE David A. (UK)

Institute of Bioengineering - School of Engineering and Materials Science - London - UK

MAUCK Robert L. (USA)

McKay Orthopaedic Research Lab., Dept. of Orthopaedic Surgery - University of Pennsylvania - Philadelphia - USA

Gene expression can be regulated through alterations in nuclear architecture providing control of genome function. Mechanical loading induces both nuclear distortion and alteration in gene expression in a variety of cell types. One putative transduction mechanism for this phenomenon involves alterations to nuclear architecture, resulting from the mechanical perturbation to the cell, to induce altered gene expression. Moreover, remodeling of the nucleus occurs during stem cell differentiation, causing alterations in nuclear stiffness and potentially influencing nuclear architecture-mediated mechano-regulation of transcription. These putative mechanotransduction processes have not been studied in detail before and form the basis of the current proposal. Accordingly the aims of this project are to test the following hypotheses:

1. Mechanically-induced nuclear distortion causes alterations to the nuclear architecture and chromosomal territories sufficient to affect gene transcription

2. Stem cell differentiation modulates the process set out in hypothesis 1, via differentiation-induced nuclear remodeling that affects the mechanical properties of the nucleus.

The successful realization of the aims necessitates collaboration between researchers with complementary expertise in bioengineering, biophysics and cell/molecular biology. Accordingly, we plan an ambitious and innovative program of research that benefits from a highly interdisciplinary approach, building on the existing strengths of the collaborators. The studies will utilize model systems involving human mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) and induced pluripotent stem cells (IPSC) in conjunction with state-of-the-art techniques for the mechanical perturbation of cells, functional analysis of nuclear organization and biomechanical analysis. Ultimately a mechanistic model for functional mechanoregulation of nuclear architecture will be developed to incorporate elements of the modeling of the mechanical properties of the nucleus in conjunction with functional genomic analysis.