A side-by-side comparison of Lacrymaria olor, a remarkable ciliate with its neck extended and retracted. Researchers discovered origami-like folds make this morphing possible where microtubules define folding pleats. Credit: Prakash Lab
Stanford scientists have unveiled lacrygami, a phenomenon where Lacrymaria olor extends its structure dramatically, influenced by its cytoskeletal design, promising advances in microscopic technology.
There are some things in life you can watch and then never unwatch, said Manu Prakash, associate professor of bioengineering at Stanford University, calling up a video of his latest fascination, the single-cell organism Lacrymaria olor, a free-living protist he stumbled upon playing with his paper Foldscope. Its just its mesmerizing.
From the minute Manu showed it to me, I have just been transfixed by this cell, said Eliott Flaum, a graduate student in the curiosity-driven Prakash Lab. Prakash and Flaum spent the last seven years studying Lacrymaria olors every move and recently published a paper on their work in the journal Science.
The first time I came back with a fluorescence micrograph, it was just breathtaking, Flaum said. That image is in the paper.
The video Prakash queued up reveals why this organism is much more than a pretty picture: a single teardrop-shaped cell swims in a droplet of pond water. In an instant, a long, thin neck projects out from the bulbous lower end. And it keeps going. And going. Then, just as quickly, the neck retracts back, as if nothing had happened.
In seconds, a cell that was just 40 microns tip-to-tail sprouted a neck that extended 1500 microns or more out into the world. It is the equivalent of a 6-foot human projecting its head more than 200 feet. All from a cell without a nervous system.
It is incredibly complex behavior, Prakash said with a smile.
L. olor is featured in the journal Science because Prakash and Flaum have discovered in this behavior a new geometric mechanism previously unknown in biology. And they are the first to explain how such a simple cell can produce such incredible morphodynamics, beautiful folding and unfolding aka origami at the scale of a single cell, time and again without fail.
It is geometry. L. olors behavior is encoded in its cytoskeletal structure, just like human behavior is encoded in neural circuits.
This is the first example of cellular origami, Prakash said. Were thinking of calling it lacrygami.
Specifically, it is a subset of traditional origami known as curved-crease origami. It is all based on a structure of thin, helical microtubules ribs that wrap inside the cells membrane. These microtubule ribs are encased in a delicate diaphanous membrane, defining the crease pattern of peaks in a series of mountain-and-valley folds.
Prakash and Flaum used transmission electron microscopy and other state-of-the-art investigatory techniques to show there are actually 15 of these stiff, helical microtubule ribbons enshrouding L. olors cell membrane a cytoskeleton. These tubules coil and uncoil, leading to long projection and retraction, nesting back into themselves like the bellows of a compressed helical accordion. The gossamer of membrane tucks away inside the cell in neat, well-defined pleats.
When you store pleats on the helical angle in this way, you can store an infinite amount of material, Flaum explained. Biology has figured this out.
The elegance is in the arithmetic. It is mathematically impossible for this structure to unfold in any other way and, conversely, only one way it can retract. What is perhaps more striking to Prakash is the robustness of the architecture. In its lifetime, L. olor will perform this projection and retraction 50,000 times without flaw. He said: L. olor is bound by its geometry to fold and unfold in this particular way.
The key is an under-studied mathematical phenomenon occurring at the precise point where the ribs twist and the folded membrane begins to unfurl. It is a singularity a point where the structure is folded and unfolded at the same time. It is both and neither singular.
Grabbing a piece of paper, Prakash folds it into a cone shape and then pulls on one corner of the paper to demonstrate how this singularity (called d-cone) travels across the sheet in a neat line. And, by pushing back on the corner how the singularity travels back the exact same path to its original position.
It unfolds and folds at this singularity every time, acting as a controller. This is the first time a geometric controller of behavior has been described in a living cell. Prakash explained.
A constant theme running throughout the Prakash Labs work is a profound sense of wonder and playfulness that results in the energetic curiosity necessary to pursue such an idea for such a long time. It is, to put it in Prakashs terms, old-school science. He also refers to it as recreational biology.
To demonstrate his inspiration, Prakash displayed a family tree of other single-celled organisms that he has chosen to study. True, none can do what L. olor can do, he said. But these intricate geometries come in thousands of forms. Beautiful? Certainly, but each is also hiding wonderful and unwritten rules under their sleeves.
We started with a puzzle, Prakash explained with all the seriousness a scientist can muster. Ellie and I asked a very simple question: Where does this material come from? And where does it go? As our playground, we chose Tree of Life. Seven years later, here we are.
As for practical applications, Prakash the engineer is already imagining a new era of deployable microscale living machines that could transform everything from space telescopes to miniature surgical robots in the operating room.
Reference: Curved crease origami and topological singularities enable hyperextensibility of L. olor by Eliott Flaum and Manu Prakash, 7 June 2024, Science. DOI: 10.1126/science.adk5511
Prakash is also a senior fellow at the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment, associate professor (by courtesy) of biology and of oceans, a member of Stanford Bio-X, the Wu Tsai Human Performance Alliance, the Maternal & Child Health Research Institute, and the Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute.
This research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Moore Foundation, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Schmidt Foundation, and the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub San Francisco. Some of this work was performed at the Cell Sciences Imaging Facility at Stanford.
See more here:
- Tenure-Track: Assistant Professor in Marine Biology job with Texas A&M University - Galveston | 37740878 - The Chronicle of Higher Education - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Teaching Assistant/Associate Professor, Chemistry and Chemical Biology - The Chronicle of Higher Education - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Emerging strategies to investigate the biology of early cancer - Nature.com - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Future Medicine: Physics, Biology, And AI Will Transform Human Health - Forbes - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- NATIONAL VIEW: When AI looked at biology, the result was astounding - Odessa American - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Can We Pick Winners With Causal Human Biology? Vertex Makes the Case - Timmerman Report - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- What Remains of Edith Finch Developers Next Game is About the Wonders and Horrors of Biology&... - GamingBolt - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- Castle Biosciences to Support the 71st Annual Montagna Symposium on the Biology of the Skin - BioSpace - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- 'Where we are today in biology AI is similar to GPT in 2020': An interview with the CEO of Africa's biggest AI startup - TechCrunch - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- Bruker spools up spatial biology division from NanoString, Canopy assets - Fierce Biotech - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- Enhanced efficiency in the bilingual brain through the inter-hemispheric cortico-cerebellar pathway in early second language acquisition |... - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- Recursions Fast-Track Road to Therapeutics Using AI-Based Maps of Biology - Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- The Biology of 'Precancer': Stopping Cancer Before It Starts - Medscape - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- URMC Researcher wins 2024 Albany Medical Center Prize in Medicine and Biology - 13WHAM-TV - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- Opinion | When AI looked at biology, the result was astounding - The Washington Post - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- Castle Biosciences to Support the 71st Annual Montagna Symposium on the Biology of the Skin - Business Wire - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- Inside the ISS: Astronauts Push the Limits of Biology As Crew-8 Departure Looms - SciTechDaily - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- Implications of RNA pseudouridylation for cancer biology and therapeutics: a narrative review - Journal of Translational Medicine - October 13th, 2024 [October 13th, 2024]
- The fruit fly revolutionized biology. Now its boosting science in Africa - Science News Magazine - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- Richard Dawkins on biology, genes and his 38-year-old girlfriend - The Times - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- Smithsonians National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute Repatriates Kiwi Feathers to New Zealand - Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation... - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- CWRU debuts state-of-the-art biology laboratory classrooms and collaborative spaces - The Daily | Case Western Reserve University - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- Biology professor honored with Award of Excellence for his contributions to algae research - University of Alabama at Birmingham - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- Ohio Northern University Hosts Mock Crime Scene Investigation with Forensic Biology and Nursing Students - WKTN Radio - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- UWO alumnus, biology researcher is featured guest on prominent science podcast - UW Oshkosh Today - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- Biology Students experience international research through RISE Fellowship Grant - Illinois State University News - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- New chairperson to diversify research in biochemistry and molecular biology - University of Nevada, Reno - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- Discover Magazine Speaks with Biology Professor Bruce Robertson About Evolutionary Traps - Bard College - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- Creature Feature: Meet the "Freshwater Giant" Arapaima - Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- A Quiet Revolution: The Global Race to Control Human Biology and Its Implications - HSToday - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- Improving biology education here, there, and everywhere - MIT News - September 23rd, 2024 [September 23rd, 2024]
- 'It smells like a food bin that's overflowing': The weird biology of the giant smelly 'corpse plant' - BBC.com - September 23rd, 2024 [September 23rd, 2024]
- Instructional Professor (Open Rank) in Computational Biology - The Chronicle of Higher Education - September 23rd, 2024 [September 23rd, 2024]
- UFs Rob Ferl and Anna-Lisa Paul Talk About Blue Origin Spaceflight and Space Biology Experiments - WUFT - September 23rd, 2024 [September 23rd, 2024]
- New Alzheimer's studies reveal disease biology, risk for progression and the potential for a novel blood test - Medical Xpress - September 23rd, 2024 [September 23rd, 2024]
- David Rubenstein Donates $10 Million to Smithsonians National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institutes Giant Panda Program - Smithsonian Institution - September 23rd, 2024 [September 23rd, 2024]
- Optimization: A Theoretical Principle That Is Predictive for Biology - Discovery Institute - September 23rd, 2024 [September 23rd, 2024]
- SOMETHING FISHY: CSUB biology professors find hundreds of dead fish in dry Kern River - MSN - September 15th, 2024 [September 15th, 2024]
- Star Trek Changes Its Iconic Tribbles Forever, With Shock Revelation About Their Biology - Screen Rant - September 15th, 2024 [September 15th, 2024]
- Penn's Biology Department removes concentrations, prompting mixed reactions from students - The Daily Pennsylvanian - September 15th, 2024 [September 15th, 2024]
- Google DeepMind And Isomorphic Labs Are Making Rapid Progress In Biology And Drug Discovery - Forbes - September 15th, 2024 [September 15th, 2024]
- Bridging biology and art: An interview with Nigerian artist Samuel Ubong - Global Voices - September 15th, 2024 [September 15th, 2024]
- SOMETHING FISHY: CSUB biology professors find hundreds of dead fish in dry Kern River - KERO 23 ABC News Bakersfield - September 15th, 2024 [September 15th, 2024]
- From the marriage of physics and biology emerged a technology that has revolutionised ophthalmology laser - The Hindu - September 2nd, 2024 [September 2nd, 2024]
- Groves named head of developmental biology - Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis - September 2nd, 2024 [September 2nd, 2024]
- John Callaghan, biology professor at USC Dornsife, served as university marshal for 30 years - USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences - September 2nd, 2024 [September 2nd, 2024]
- Altered expression of vesicular trafficking machinery in prostate cancer affects lysosomal dynamics and provides insight into the underlying biology... - September 2nd, 2024 [September 2nd, 2024]
- A frugal CRISPR kit for equitable and accessible education in gene editing and synthetic biology - Nature.com - August 5th, 2024 [August 5th, 2024]
- UM Announces $5 Million Endowment to Create Chair in Fisheries Science for Wildlife Biology Program - University of Montana - August 5th, 2024 [August 5th, 2024]
- New Insights into MaleFemale Biology from Platypus and Chicken Chromosomes - Technology Networks - August 5th, 2024 [August 5th, 2024]
- Meta alum launches AI biology model that simulates 500 million years of evolution - VentureBeat - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- The strategy behind one of the most successful labs in the world - Nature.com - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Following the 'BATT Signal:' A new signaling pathway controlling planarian germ cells - EurekAlert - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Doctor Who's two hearts explained by USC Dornsife alumna - USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Evolving Education - Ohio Wesleyan University - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Biology Camp gives kids a jump start on science - Odessa American - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Special Issue of Applied Biosafety focuses on synthetic genomics - EurekAlert - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Sandra Shumway Named Fellow of the Marine Biological Association - UConn Today - University of Connecticut - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Hendrix biology professor publishes research paper | News | thecabin.net - Log Cabin Democrat - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Conagen: Deep dive into synthetic biology processes and innovation for beauty with Casey Lippmeier - Personal Care Insights - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Seeking refuge in science - ASBMB Today - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- UNF biology professor discovers northernmost mangroves ever recorded - UNF Spinnaker - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- EvolutionaryScale Raises $142 Million To Transform Biology With AI - Finimize - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Guiding humanity beyond the moon: OHIO researchers push to revolutionize human space biology - Ohio University - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Olson offers students a window into aquatic world - Nebraska Today - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Now you can get a bachelor's degree in biology in Greenland - Polarjournal - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- The Biology of Butterflies in the Stomach - Medscape - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- On the water front: invasive lake species - UMN News - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- UNCW marine biology professor shares what people need to know about shark bites, beach safety - WRAL News - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Network-driven cancer cell avatars for combination discovery and biomarker identification for DNA damage response ... - Nature.com - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Armenian students win eight medals at 4th International Applied Biology Olympiad Public Radio of Armenia - Public Radio of Armenia Official Web site - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- New tomato, potato family tree shows that fruit color and size evolved together - EurekAlert - June 27th, 2024 [June 27th, 2024]
- Exploring the biology behind maternal mental health disorders - News-Medical.Net - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]
- Meet the 29-year-old biology teacher who will compete at Pinehurst - NBC Sports - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]
- Popular Theory Debunked: Scientists Identify Unexpected Drivers Behind Giraffes' Long Necks - SciTechDaily - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]
- Changes Upstream: RIPE team uses CRISPR/Cas9 to alter photosynthesis for the first time - EurekAlert - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]
- Genome-wide meta-analyses of restless legs syndrome yield insights into genetic architecture, disease biology and ... - Nature.com - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]
- WT Biology Professor Wins Grant to Study Panhandle's Pheasant Population - West Texas A&M University - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]
- Jessica Cottrell and Biology Student Mahika Ganguly Awarded STEM Undergraduate Research Award - Seton Hall University - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]
- Meet Our Pygmy Slow Loris Babies | Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute - Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology... - June 9th, 2024 [June 9th, 2024]