The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2013
The
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2013 was awarded jointly to
James E. Rothman, Randy W. Schekman and Thomas C. Südhof "for
their discoveries of machinery regulating vesicle traffic, a major
transport system in our cells".
A Presentation to summerize the discovery
Summary of the Press Release by the Nobel Foundation
Summary of the Press Release by the Nobel Foundation
Summary
The 2013
Nobel Prize honours three scientists who have solved the mystery of
how the cell organizes its transport system. Each cell is a factory
that produces and exports molecules. For instance, insulin is
manufactured and released into the blood and chemical signals called
neurotransmitters are sent from one nerve cell to another. These
molecules are transported around the cell in small packages called
vesicles. The three Nobel Laureates have discovered the molecular
principles that govern how this cargo is delivered to the right place
at the right time in the cell.
Randy
Schekman discovered a set of genes that were required for vesicle
traffic. James Rothman unravelled protein machinery that allows
vesicles to fuse with their targets to permit transfer of cargo.
Thomas Südhof revealed how signals instruct vesicles to release
their cargo with precision.
Through
their discoveries, Rothman, Schekman and Südhof have revealed the
exquisitely precise control system for the transport and delivery of
cellular cargo. Disturbances in this system have deleterious effects
and contribute to conditions such as neurological diseases, diabetes,
and immunological disorders.
How cargo is transported in the cell
In a large
and busy port, systems are required to ensure that the correct cargo
is shipped to the correct destination at the right time. The cell,
with its different compartments called organelles, faces a similar
problem: cells produce molecules such as hormones, neurotransmitters,
cytokines and enzymes that have to be delivered to other places
inside the cell, or exported out of the cell, at exactly the right
moment. Timing and location are everything. Miniature bubble-like
vesicles, surrounded by membranes, shuttle the cargo between
organelles or fuse with the outer membrane of the cell and release
their cargo to the outside. This is of major importance, as it
triggers nerve activation in the case of transmitter substances, or
controls metabolism in the case of hormones. How do these vesicles
know where and when to deliver their cargo?
Traffic congestion reveals genetic controllers
Randy
Schekman was
fascinated by how the cell organizes its transport system and in the
1970s decided to study its genetic basis by using yeast as a model
system. In a genetic screen, he identified yeast cells with defective
transport machinery, giving rise to a situation resembling a poorly
planned public transport system. Vesicles piled up in certain parts
of the cell. He
found that the cause of this congestion was genetic and went on to
identify the mutated genes. Schekman identified three classes of
genes that control different facets of the cell´s transport system,
thereby providing new insights into the tightly regulated machinery
that mediates vesicle transport in the cell.
Docking with precision
James
Rothman was
also intrigued by the nature of the cell´s transport system. When
studying vesicle transport in mammalian cells in the 1980s and 1990s,
Rothman discovered that a protein complex enables vesicles to dock
and fuse with their target membranes. In the fusion process, proteins
on the vesicles and target membranes bind to each other like the two
sides of a zipper. The fact that there are many such proteins and
that they bind only in specific combinations ensures that cargo is
delivered to a precise location. The same principle operates inside
the cell and when a vesicle binds to the cell´s outer membrane to
release its contents.
It turned
out that some of the genes Schekman had discovered in yeast coded for
proteins corresponding to those Rothman identified in mammals,
revealing an ancient evolutionary origin of the transport system.
Collectively, they mapped critical components of the cell´s
transport machinery.
Timing is everything
Thomas
Südhof was
interested in how nerve cells communicate with one another in the
brain. The signalling molecules, neurotransmitters, are released from
vesicles that fuse with the outer membrane of nerve cells by using
the machinery discovered by Rothman and Schekman. But these vesicles
are only allowed to release their contents when the nerve cell
signals to its neighbours. How is this release controlled in such a
precise manner? Calcium ions were known to be involved in this
process and in the 1990s, Südhof searched for calcium sensitive
proteins in nerve cells. He identified molecular machinery that
responds to an influx of calcium ions and directs neighbour proteins
rapidly to bind vesicles to the outer membrane of the nerve cell. The
zipper opens up and signal substances are released. Südhof´s
discovery explained how temporal precision is achieved and how
vesicles´ contents can be released on command.
Vesicle transport gives insight into disease processes
The three
Nobel Laureates have discovered a fundamental process in cell
physiology. These discoveries have had a major impact on our
understanding of how cargo is delivered with timing and precision
within and outside the cell. Vesicle transport and fusion
operate, with the same general principles, in organisms as different
as yeast and man. The system is critical for a variety of
physiological processes in which vesicle fusion must be controlled,
ranging from signalling in the brain to release of hormones and
immune cytokines. Defective vesicle transport occurs in a variety of
diseases including a number of neurological and immunological
disorders, as well as in diabetes. Without this wonderfully precise
organization, the cell would lapse into chaos.
James
E. Rothman was
born 1950 in Haverhill, Massachusetts, USA. He received his PhD from
Harvard Medical School in 1976, was a postdoctoral fellow at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and moved in 1978 to Stanford
University in California, where he started his research on the
vesicles of the cell. Rothman has also worked at Princeton
University, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Institute and Columbia
University. In 2008, he joined the faculty of Yale University in New
Haven, Connecticut, USA, where he is currently Professor and Chairman
in the Department of Cell Biology.
Randy
W. Schekman was
born 1948 in St Paul, Minnesota, USA, studied at the University of
California in Los Angeles and at Stanford University, where he
obtained his PhD in 1974 under the supervision of Arthur Kornberg
(Nobel Prize 1959) and in the same department that Rothman joined a
few years later. In 1976, Schekman joined the faculty of the
University of California at Berkeley, where he is currently Professor
in the Department of Molecular and Cell biology. Schekman is also an
investigator of Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Thomas
C. Südhof was
born in 1955 in Göttingen, Germany. He studied at the
Georg-August-Universität in Göttingen, where he received an MD in
1982 and a Doctorate in neurochemistry the same year. In 1983, he
moved to the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in
Dallas, Texas, USA, as a postdoctoral fellow with Michael Brown and
Joseph Goldstein (who shared the 1985 Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine). Südhof became an investigator of Howard Hughes Medical
Institute in 1991 and was appointed Professor of Molecular and
Cellular Physiology at Stanford University in 2008.
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