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One giant leap for womankind —  and Israel

The science

 
 
 

A major approach to learning about the way cells work is to study the chemicals of the cell. The shape and workings of molecules, that is, the complex chemicals, can be studied with a technique called X-ray crystallography. That approach involves first transforming the chemical of interest into crystals — a form in which there is a regular, stable pattern of atoms. Table salt and sugar are crystalline forms of simple chemicals, and are easy to prepare. But more complex chemicals and structures can be challenging to crystallize. Once crystals are made, their structure is revealed by bombarding them with X-rays. The X-rays are deflected by individual atoms, and the pattern of the deflected rays, collected on X-ray film, or by other methods, is studied in order to infer the atomic architecture of the molecules.

In 1953 when the structure of DNA was solved, it was in part due to the work of another Jewish woman scientist, Rosalind Franklin, who in the 1940s and ’50s, used X-ray crystallography to study DNA crystals and concluded that DNA was a twisted helical molecule. Unfortunately, she did not live long enough to be awarded a Nobel Prize for her ground-breaking work on that monumental problem; she died of cancer at the age of 38. James Watson, Francis Crick, and Maurice Wilkins received the Nobel Prize in medicine or physiology for DNA structure in 1962.

X-ray crystallography of ribosomes has helped to reveal how they work to produce proteins, which build and control everything that living organisms do. But ribosomes are made up of extremely complex combinations of various chemicals, including a variety of proteins and RNA (a chemical cousin of DNA). Scientists who first attempted to study ribosomes could not crystallize them. “Ribosomes deteriorate fairly quickly,” explained Ada Yonath in an interview with Adam Smith of the Nobel Foundation. As a young scientist working in the 1970s, she was frustrated by failed attempts to form crystals for analysis. “At one point I had to describe what I was doing…. [I]t was like climbing Mount Everest, only to find out there was another mountain behind it.”

Ironically, her breakthrough in research came when she had a bicycle accident and suffered a severe concussion. “I had some free time and had to recover. I read a lot,” said Yonath. Through her reading she learned that polar bears from the North Pole had ribosomes that were special; the bears needed a way to preserve their ribosomes over the severe winter and had evolved a way to pack them on membranes to protect them. “Maybe this can be used to solve the structure of the ribosome,” she thought. That was when she came up with the idea of studying ribosomes from very hardy species. “I used ribosomes from very, very robust bacteria,” said Yonath.

image
X-ray structures of the two ribosomal subunits from bacteria.

The most robust bacteria are those that live at extreme conditions, such as bacteria that live in very hot or in very salty conditions. Yonath ended up studying thermophilic bacteria from hot springs, as well as bacterial species native to Israel that live in the Dead Sea. The hardy cells turned out to have resilient ribosomes, which enabled her to form the useful crystals. Over the last three decades, Yonath’s work, along with that of Thomas Steitz, Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, and their co-workers, has aimed to refine the procedure, and in the process learn how ribosomes work in greater detail.

Further breakthroughs credited to these scientists have shown that antibiotic drugs that bind to ribosomes can block their function and kill cells. Since bacterial cells have ribosomes that are different from animal cells, it is possible to develop drugs that can target disease-causing bacteria and help people recover from serious illnesses. “The ribosome is very important,” Yonath explained. “It is a target for many antibiotics.… We want to increase the possibility of the antibiotic to distinguish between the patient, who has to recover, and the pathogen, that has to die.”

Dr. Edward Friedland, an orthopedic surgeon from Wyckoff, commented on Yonath’s scientific breakthroughs. “What she has gotten recognition for is a wonderful advance in many regards. It may allow us to find ways to break down resistance of many bacteria to antibiotics,” he said. One of the major problems in medical practice today is the development of antibiotic resistant strains of bacteria that spread from patient to patient in hospitals and other medical facilities. “If we could get into the mechanisms of the ribosomes, we could get over the resistance,” said Friedland, who serves on the New Jersey regional board of the American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science. Friedland visited Weizmann Institute last November and “was impressed with its scope and the number of different aspects of science that they’re involved in.”

“They are exploring multiple facets of science on a basic level,” he noted. “Methicillin Resistant Staph Aureus — you can’t fight them. Thousands die because of resistant bacteria. Her research is outstanding and opens the door to future research.”

 

More on: One giant leap for womankind — and Israel

 
 
 

“This year, five women have conferred the greatest benefit on mankind. Congratulations to these Nobel Prize winners who, we believe, exemplify the pioneering spirit in all of us — regardless of gender.”

—Full page New York Times advertisement for Levi’s, Oct. 18, 2009.

Ada Yonath, age 70, made history on Oct. 7, becoming the first Israeli woman to win a Nobel Prize. She grew up in an impoverished Sephardic family in Jerusalem, went on to receive her doctorate from the Weizmann Institute of Science, completed postdoctoral fellowships at Carnegie Mellon University and MIT, and returned to Weizmann to undertake her ground-breaking biochemistry work. The Nobel Prize in chemistry was awarded to Yonath, together with Thomas Steitz of Yale University and Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, of the MRC Laboratory for Molecular Biology, Cambridge, U.K. “for studies of the structure and function of the ribosome.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
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In balance, in harmony

Agnes Adler is a little pixie of a thing with a musical Hungarian accent. As she and her husband David walk into a room, she tells him to smile, to say hello, not to be a grump, and he lovingly responds, “Yes, Mammi, whatever you say.” He is wont to stay in the background, however, as an invisible flying buttress, supporting her in artistic endeavors and much more, while also creating his own massive sculptures.

David stands a full head taller than his wife, continues to smile the smile of the gentlemen chauvinists of his generation. He and Aggie love to sharpen their blades on their wit and humor. She complains, “I have to do everything and he expects me to wait on him hand and foot. Men! Impossible!”

 

Haiti: Two years later

‘When all else is broken, human dignity must stand whole’

Two years after the earthquake that devastated Haiti, medical students at Quisqueya University earlier this month took part in the island nation’s first “White Coat Ceremony,” marking the commitment of medical students there to providing compassionate, patient-based care.

This symbolic ritual for future doctors, now common at U.S. and Israeli medical schools, was introduced in 1993 by the Englewood Cliffs-based Arnold P. Gold Foundation. It has since spread to 18 countries, including Afghanistan, Japan, and now Haiti, thanks to the efforts of Tenafly resident Dr. Galit M. Sacajiu.

“Some of you may be asking yourselves, when medical school buildings and operating rooms have yet to be rebuilt and a single medical textbook is a luxury, when we have no laboratories, and so many of our brothers and sisters still live in makeshift homes, why invest in an event such as this ceremony of humanism in medicine?” asked Sacajiu, in her remarks at the Jan. 16 ceremony.

 

Love and hate in Bergen County

Communal meeting, interfaith gathering follow in Rutherford bombing’s wake

With the Jewish communities of Bergen County on heightened alert, some 200 religious and community leaders gathered on Jan. 12 to discuss the recent string of anti-Semitic incidents in the county with law enforcement and government officials.

The meeting followed by one day the most recent, and most serious, attack — a firebombing that could have claimed the lives of eight people. The incident targeted the old Queen Anne building in Rutherford that houses Orthodox Congregation Beth El, as well as the home of its rabbi and his family. Five of the eight potential victims were children.

 

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Iran threat

Will March 5 be D(ecision) Day?

WASHINGTON – March 5 is shaping up to be a crucial day in the effort to rein in Iran’s nuclear program.

In Vienna, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) will convene to consider its inspectors’ latest report on Iran’s nuclear program. The last such report came closer than ever to indicting the Iranian regime for making weapons, and it helped spur stronger international sanctions against Tehran.

Several hours later, in Washington, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu will deliver a speech to an American Israel Public Affairs policy conference about what should happen next with Iran. Either before or after the AIPAC meeting, Netanyahu likely will meet with President Barack Obama to discuss Iran options.

 

Iran threat

After a string of foiled plots...

WASHINGTON – When America’s top intelligence official said that Iran’s regime is considering attacks on U.S. soil, he cited a single incident and qualified the assessment with a “probably.”

Intelligence and law enforcement experts, however, say that the Jan. 31 warning by the director of national intelligence, James Clapper, was likely based on more than the evidence he cited.

“I would be surprised to learn a statement like that was not backed up by intelligence,” said Mark Dubowitz, executive director of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

 

Iran threat

Locally, fear not but be alert

News reports notwithstanding, “There is no indication that there are any specific and/or imminent threats to Jewish communities in the U.S. at this time as a result of recent events,” according to an alert received this week by the Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC) of the Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey. Nevertheless, the alert said, that could change “should military action break out in the Middle East in coming months.”

An open attack on Iran is only one “trigger” that could raise the threat level, the alert said. “Increased pressure from sanctions, continued perceived threats from Israel, the United States, and others, sabotage against nuclear facilities, and continued alleged assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists” could also bring about an Iranian response aimed at Jewish or Israeli targets in the West, especially the United States.

 
 
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