Brief encounters: how fleeting protein interactions shape health

The UK's leading scientific academy – the Royal Society – has announced that Professor Sheena Radford is to receive one of its most prestigious research awards.

The Research Professorship will enable Professor Radford, Director of the Astbury Centre for Structural Molecular Biology, to develop new techniques to "see the unseen" and reveal the way that proteins interact to shape or to destroy memories.

There aren’t many scientists who can say their research is opening a new chapter in biology, but that is what Professor Radford will be doing.

PROFESSOR SIMONE BUITENDIJK, VICE-CHANCELLOR

The study will focus on one of the big unanswered questions in biology: the role that a protein structure called amyloid plays in both building memories that can last for decades – but also in the devastating memory loss experienced by people with neurodegenerative diseases.

To conduct the research, Professor Radford and her team will first have to develop new experimental techniques to allow scientists to visualise the processes where proteins come together with each other and interact with other components within a cell. 

Her work will lay the foundation for one of the first research hubs in the world, to be based at the University, that will map protein interactions, allowing scientists to understand those interactions which are necessary for healthy life and those that cause disease. Incorrect interactions are known to be crucial factors in diseases spanning cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes and dementia.

'Choreography of proteins' that shape health 

Professor Radford said: “Proteins are the workhorses of life – there are tens of thousands of proteins in the human body. They come together in fleeting interactions to carry out the vital chemical and signalling processes necessary for life. 

“The aim of the research is to develop new experimental approaches that will enable us to visualise and map those interactions in real time within cells and tissues. When we have that information, we can begin to understand how the complex choreography of protein molecules gives rise to healthy life, and how aberrant protein behaviour can cause disease.”

The Research Professorship is the premier award made by the Royal Society. It goes to internationally-acclaimed scientists who are undertaking important and original research and it allows them to be released from other duties to focus on their research. The Royal Society has announced seven research professorships today, covering the fields of physics, ecology, mathematics, computer science, astronomy, medicine and cell biology.

The awards last for five years.

Professor Simone Buitendijk, Vice-Chancellor, said: “The award from the Royal Society is a recognition of the huge advances that Professor Radford and her team have made in understanding the structural and molecular basis of life.

“There aren’t many scientists who can say their research is opening up a new chapter in biology, but that is exactly what Professor Radford will be doing and I am proud that Leeds and the Astbury Centre is at the heart of that endeavour.”

The good and bad of amyloid fibrils

The first phase of Professor Radford’s research will focus on a protein structure known as amyloid.

An amyloid structure can form when a protein fails to fold properly and forms clumps or fibrils. For more than a century, scientists suspected that amyloid formation causes disease, although the process is still not fully understood. Some amyloid diseases cause memory loss, such as that experienced by people with Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s diseases. 

More recently, though, scientists have discovered that fibrils are also essential for healthy cell functioning, such as in the laying down of long-term memories.

Professor Radford said: “The most fascinating question is how the amyloid fold can either create or destroy memory –the good and the bad amyloid fibrils. It’s all about the fleeting interactions that these amyloid assemblies make, and we need new ways to track and understand these interactions in our cells to truly understand them.”

Despite major advances in electron microscopes, which are capable of revealing the structures of complex proteins including amyloid fibrils, researchers have been unable to see and understand these dynamic and fleeting interactions. 

Professor Radford believes by exploiting recent advances in chemical biology and biophysics, it will be possible to open a new window onto the world of protein dynamics.

Hub for Dynamic Disease Mechanisms

Professor Radford will develop one of the world’s first research hubs for mapping dynamic protein interactions. Known as the Centre for Dynamic Disease Mechanisms at Leeds, it will bring together researchers in academia from a range of backgrounds and from across the globe, working with clinicians and industry to get a deeper understanding of the brief encounters that proteins make to choreograph healthy life.

The images shows a visualisation of the molecular structure of a protein called aurora. It looks like a tangle of thin threads.

The image shows a visualisation of a protein called Aurora A (light blue) and its three protein partners. Credit: Professor Richard Bayliss. 

Professor Dame Linda Partridge, Vice President of the Royal Society, said: “We are delighted to have appointed seven Royal Society Research Professorships this year. It is becoming more important to enable world-leading talent such as these exceptional scientists. By offering long term support to carry out exciting and visionary research, these scientists will contribute to and strengthen the continued success of UK science.”

Further information

Top image: Professor Sheena Radford.

For further information please contact David Lewis in the media office at the University of Leeds: d.lewis@leeds.ac.uk or on 07710 013287.