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In unfavorable conditions, ribosomes, the molecular machinery that creates proteins, are made idle by hibernation factors that help ribosomes avoid reactivation, like a sleeping mask that prevents a person from being woken up by light. Using a new method called cryoPRISM, researchers found that some ribosomes interacted not only with a hibernation factor, but also with another factor, previously believed in bacteria to only interact with active ribosomes. Image Credit: Ekaterina Khalizeva |
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: CryoPRISM
The Core Concept: CryoPRISM (purification-free ribosome imaging from subcellular mixtures) is an advanced structural biology imaging technique that enables researchers to observe biomolecular complexes, such as ribosomes, within their near-natural cellular environments.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: Unlike traditional methodologies that require isolating and extensively purifying molecules—which risks altering their natural structures—cryoPRISM captures high-resolution molecular states using unpurified cellular lysates from freshly burst cells. This approach preserves native molecular interactions and cellular context without the immense technical and resource demands of full in-cell imaging.
Origin/History: Developed by graduate students Mira May and Gabriela López-Pérez in the Davis Lab at the MIT Department of Biology. The technique originated from an unexpected discovery when a negative control experiment utilizing unpurified bacterial lysate yielded intact, naturally interacting ribosomes rather than the anticipated noisy, low-quality data.