Biology Department Seminar

"Building Artificial Cell Membranes"

Presented by Ting Zhu, Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA

Monday, April 5, 2010, 1:30 pm — John Dunn Seminar Room, Bldg. 463

Building simple artificial cells (protocells) requires solutions to the problem of how biological processes such as cyclic growth and division could emerge from purely physico-chemical systems. Here we describe a simple and efficient pathway for model protocell membrane growth and division. The growth of large fatty acid vesicles fed with fatty acid micelles, in a solution where solute permeation across the membranes is slow, results in the transformation of initially spherical vesicles into long thread-like vesicles, a process driven by the transient imbalance between surface area and volume growth. Modest shear forces are then sufficient to cause the thread-like vesicles to divide into multiple daughter vesicles without loss of internal contents. We show that model protocells can proceed through multiple cycles of reproduction. Encapsulated RNA molecules, representing a primitive genome, are distributed to the daughter vesicles. Our observations bring us closer to the laboratory synthesis of a complete protocell consisting of a self-replicating genome and a self-replicating membrane compartment.

Hosted by: Huilin Li

6352  |  INT/EXT  |  Events Calendar

 

Not all computers/devices will add this event to your calendar automatically.

A calendar event file named "calendar.ics" will be placed in your downloads location. Depending on how your device/computer is configured, you may have to locate this file and double click on it to add the event to your calendar.

Event dates, times, and locations are subject to change. Event details will not be updated automatically once you add this event to your own calendar. Check the Lab's Events Calendar to ensure that you have the latest event information.