Scientists Find Synthetic Mimic For Critical Biomolecule

  • News
  • 2.1K

Biological assemblies are thousands of tiny pieces of machinery which play collectively important roles towards maintaining the cellular structure and functions, and many of them even play very critical roles. Self-assembly of these tiny machines requires biological fuel to become operational. Scientists have been trying to figure out how these tiny machines are controlled. This could help in controlling engineered organic designs comparable to natural frameworks.

Research team at Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR), Bangalore.

The research team at Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR), Bengaluru.

A research team led by Dr. Subi J. George and Dr. S. Balasubramanian at Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR), Bengaluru, have shown that synthetic molecules can grow and be controlled on similar stimuli such as biological systems.

In this study, researchers worked on Actin, a protein which frames the contractile fibers of muscle cells. In a living system, Actin assembles on its own using its monomer components under the influence of biological fuel Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP). Actin as the tiny machine works like a treadmill to support cellular movements.

The researchers have mimicked ATP-selective actin- like self-assembly in the laboratory very similar to what happens in the natural conditions inside the cells. They could observe monomer subunits undergoing ATP-fuel-driven elongation resembling natural actin self-assembly. Interestingly, when researchers used ATP-hydrolysing enzymes, it prompts actin dissociation. The results of this study have been published in the journal Nature Communications.

Speaking to India Science Wire, Dr. George said “since the stimulus in our case is ATP, which is one of the most universally present chemicals, this makes our work a benchmark in what can be achieved synthetically. Also, our study has come closest in synthetically mimicking natural protein Actin’s assembly, a protein which plays an important role in various biological functions. These outcomes will guide investigators to search for more synthetic analogs of important biological self-assembly”.

“Using biological cues like ATP opens up routes for bio-adaptable systems. A step even further perhaps is the possibility of an organic electronic device in the interface with biological live feed. Such a system would be highly efficient and uniquely adaptive in reporting live biological changes in a body,” he added.

Commenting on the research findings, Prof. E. W. Meijer from the Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands- who is not involved in the work, said, “Researchers have tackled one of the main challenges in mimicking natural systems. Where chemists normally can control the assembly of small molecules in large one-dimensional aggregates only by solvent or temperature, Nature assembles and disassembles these structures by chemical fuels – chemical reactions that take care of the growth. This study is an important next step in the development of functional life-like materials and systems.”

The research team also included Ananya Mishra, D. B. Korlepara, Mohit Kumar, Ankit Jain, N.Jonnalagadda, and K.K. Bejagam. The study was funded by the Department of Science and Technology. (India Science Wire)

By Ratneshwar Thakur

Journal Article

Biomimetic temporal self-assembly via fuel-driven controlled supramolecular polymerization

For the latest Science, Tech news and conversations, follow Research Stash on Twitter, Facebook, and subscribe to our YouTube channel

Rate

0 out of 5 stars(0 ratings)
A Glimpse of India’s Scientific Prowess Buried for Posterity in Time Capsule

A Glimpse of India’s Scientific Prowess Buried for Posterity in Time Capsule

The 106th session India Science Congress underway here had a unique moment today when a time capsule containing 100 items representing India’s scientific prowess

  • News
  • 1.5K
Read more
India’s S&T Institutions Raise their Game Against COVID-19

India ’s S&T Institutions Raise their Game Against COVID-19

With over 1.3 billion people in Her bosom, the spread of coronavirus in India and India’s response mechanisms are being closely watched over by the rest of the world.

  • News
  • 2.6K
Read more
Team of NPL researchers.

India’s Timekeeper Says Country Need Two Time Zones

A new analysis by the National Physical Laboratory - India’s official timekeeper - has supported long-standing demand for a separate time zone for eastern states - Assam, Meghalaya, Nagaland, Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Mizoram, Tripura – and Andaman and the Nicobar Islands

  • News
  • 1.4K
Read more

Internet is huge! Help us find great content

Newsletter

Never miss a thing! Sign up for our newsletter to stay updated.

About

Research Stash is a curated collection of tools and News for S.T.E.M researchers

Have any questions or want to partner with us? Reach us at hello@researchstash.com

Navigation

Submit