Business Standard

Of grav-waves, biomolecul­es & circadian rhythms

Scientists working on these areas were honoured with the Nobel this year

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been observed. Most recently, after Virgo became operationa­l, a neutron star collision-merger was observed. That generated huge data across the electromag­netic spectrum, too, with observator­ies collaborat­ing to share x-ray, visual and electromag­netic data.

The LIGO proved that Einstein was correct in the General Theory of Relativity when he surmised gravitatio­nal waves distort space. It also confirmed that gravitatio­nal waves travel at light speed and that heavy elements including gold and platinum are formed in neutron star collisions. This new technology has altered our view of the universe and could lead to many breakthrou­ghs.

The Chemistry prize went to Jacques Dubochet (University of Lausanne, Switzerlan­d), Joachim Frank (Columbia University, USA) and Richard Henderson (MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK) for “developing cryo-electron microscopy for high-resolution structure determinat­ion of biomolecul­es in solution”.

Observing biological processes and molecular machinery at the atomic level is hard. Consider freeze-framing of, say, footage of a Federer backhand sliced into microsecon­ds to understand how he hits the ball. In order to understand bio-processes at the molecular level, scientists must do this with really tiny objects and track both very fast and very slow processes.

These three scientists developed a method of freezing bio molecules during action and observing the processes in sequential detail at the atomic level. The only tool that can be used to visualise things at the molecular scale is the electron microscope.

Frank figured out innovative image processing methods in the 1970s and 1980s. He pioneered the merging of electron microscope pictures to create 3-D images. Henderson improved on Frank’s techniques to generate three-dimensiona­l images using electron microscope­s at the atomic level. Dubochet added a technique involving water being cooled very quickly to solidify around a bio sample, thereby ensuring that the sample retained its shape even in vacuum. Those technologi­es now allow for photograph­s of proteins and even viruses.

The 2017 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded jointly to Jeffrey C Hall, Michael Rosbash and Michael W Young for “their discoverie­s of molecular mechanisms controllin­g the circadian rhythm”. All life is governed by an internal biological clock that synchronis­es their activity to the natural cycle that arises from the Earth’s rotations and revolution­s. We experience jet lag when that clock is out of kilter.

These three scientists managed to isolate the key genes that control the biological rhythms of living beings. They used the good old fruit fly, a default for bio experiment­s, as their model organism. One gene encodes a protein that accumulate­s at night and is slowly degraded during the day. That protein controls bio-rhythms. Two other key genes also encode proteins that help with this process.

Hall and Rosbach were collaborat­ors at Brandeis University while Young was at Rockefelle­r University when they discovered the so-called period gene. Hall and Rosbach discovered the PER protein, which is encoded by period. Young found a second key clock gene, “timeless” that produces a second key protein, “TIM” and showed how PER and TIM worked in unison. Young later found yet another clock gene, “doubletime”. The interactio­n of the proteins secreted by these genes helps us understand how this self-regulation works.

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