Trees of Knowledge

English

 

Profs. Karl Skorecki and Ehud Shapiro. Jewish genetics

 

 
 
Are some contemporary Jewish men descended from the biblical Aaron? Are all cancer metastases derived from the same primary tumor? These are the kinds of questions addressed by Prof. Karl Skorecki, a Rambam Medical Center physician who recently spent his sabbatical leave in the Weizmann Institute's Computer Science and Applied Mathematics Department.
 
Why would a physician choose to spend his sabbatical among computer scientists? Skorecki splits his time between treating patients at Rambam and conducting research in population genetics as Director of the Rappaport Research Institute at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. He believes that interaction with computer scientists can help him solve biological problems in "out of the box" ways. Skorecki came to Weizmann because he was fascinated by the work of Institute computer scientist Prof. Ehud Shapiro, who has developed an innovative computational approach to tackling biological questions. Besides, Skorecki had already spent a sabbatical at Weizmann in 1991 before immigrating to Israel from Canada.
 
The approach developed by Shapiro's team takes advantage of certain markers on the DNA molecule to trace the origins, or lineage, of body cells. In particular, DNA regions called microsatellites, which contain numerous repeated genetic "letters," are especially prone to accumulating mistakes – just as a word like "Mississippi" could easily be misspelled as, say, "Missississippi." By assessing such genetic misspellings, scientists can tell how many divisions a cell has undergone and trace the lineage relations among cells.
 
The cells Skorecki studied during his sabbatical at the Weizmann Institute, in collaboration with postdoctoral fellow Dr. Shalev Itzkovitz, included different types of cancer cells. The goal of one collaborative study, for example, was to determine the number of divisions undergone by leukemia cells, which in turn can help assess the aggressiveness of the cancer.
 
These studies, Skorecki says, resemble the population genetics research he has been conducting for many years: "You are looking at the relatedness of cells rather than people, but in both cases you are using DNA analysis to build lineage trees that reveal common origins and different branches." In one study, he analyzed the Y chromosome, which determines male gender and is helpful for tracing ancestry because it is passed on intact from father to son. The analysis revealed that contemporary Jewish men traditionally belonging to the Cohanim tribe might have had a common male ancestor who lived 2,000 to 3,000 years ago – a finding that appears to support the Jewish tradition according to which following the exodus from Egypt, all Jewish priests, the Cohanim, are male descendants of Moses' brother Aaron. In another study, Skorecki and his colleagues found that nearly half of all Ashkenazi Jews can trace their ancestry back to just four women who lived close to 2,000 years ago. Skorecki has also recently revealed that genetic features of the Druze population in northern Israel and its neighboring countries lend credence to the Druze belief about the diverse origins of this ancient minority.
 
Skorecki: "The Weizmann Institute is making an enormous contribution to Israeli medicine by bringing physicians into its labs and teaching them to think like scientists. The more the physicians are trained in critical scientific thinking, the more effective they will be in treating patients. We need to realize the limits of our knowledge and always seek to learn more."
 
Prof. Ehud Shapiro's research is supported by the Clore Center for Biological Physics; the Arie and Ida Crown Memorial Charitable Fund; the Phyllis and Joseph Gurwin Fund for Scientific Advancement; Sally Leafman Appelbaum, Scottsdale, AZ; the Carolito Stiftung, Switzerland; and the Louis Chor Memorial Trust Fund. Prof. Shapiro is the incumbent of the Harry Weinrebe Chair of Computer Science and Biology.
 
(l-r) Profs. Karl Skorecki and Ehud Shapiro.
Math & Computer Science
English

Brain Gain

English

Looking Forward

 
Thirty-four in three years: New scientists are keeping the Weizmann Institute at science's cutting edge

"We can't allow ourselves to not bring these young scientists here. We can't afford to lose their talents," said Prof. Daniel Zajfman, President of the Weizmann Institute of Science, while recently introducing some of the newest members of the Institute faculty to the Institute Board of Governors. This year marks the 60th anniversary of the Weizmann Institute, and we are celebrating by looking forward: A record number of young scientists has been recruited to the Institute in the last three years. In the years to come, they will shape not only the face of the Institute but the course of science as a whole.

Those who would attract young, outstanding scientists to work in Israel face tough competition. When they're at the point of finishing postdoctoral research and looking for a faculty position, these scientists – men and women who have the potential to pioneer new scientific fields or revolutionize medical research or technology – may be receiving offers from top labs around the world.
 
After spending several years working abroad, the pull of home can pale beside the lure of a large, well-endowed university in North America or Europe – even for native Israelis. Therefore, rather than waiting for these young scientists to come knocking on the door, the Weizmann Institute has made a concerted effort to seek out new talent.
 
Recruiting young, promising scientists requires, first and foremost, up-to-date labs with the latest scientific equipment, often running to a million dollars or more for a new researcher. The outlay can include everything from an entire lab outfitted to study bats in a natural, cave-like environment to investing in the fastest lasers in the world – with pulses of a billionth of a billionth of a second.
 
Young scientists bring new talent to the Weizmann Institute
 

 
Hired in 2005/2006
Hired in 2007
Hired in 2008
 
 
 

T

 
In the photo are 27 of the 34 scientists recruited over the last 3 years
English

Fluent in Science

English

Dr. Anat Yarden. How a scientist thinks

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

Like any language, the lingo of scientific literature is understood by its readers and writers but unintelligible to nearly everyone outside the select group of those working and thinking in the field. To outsiders who know how to interpret the language, scientific papers are a fascinating window onto the world of a scientist. To high school science students, they could offer an engaging, real-life view of “how science is done,” if only the language barrier didn’t stand in their way.

The issue of understanding arose a number of years ago in the Science Teaching Department when several members were attempting to create a high school teaching unit on embryonic development – an especially complex subject that generally requires the mastery of a whole set of terms for key concepts and intricate processes. Clearly there was not enough time allotted in the curriculum to learn an entire scientific lexicon. Prof. Benjamin Geiger, then Dean of the Feinberg Graduate School (today Dean of the Faculty of Biology) proposed a new concept: Teach students how a developmental biologist thinks and works by having them read scientific research papers. Dr. Anat Yarden, whose background is in embryonic development, took up the idea.She developed a unique method of adapting scientific literature so that it could be read and understood by high school students.

The first textbook to come out of this initiative, The Secrets of Embryonic Development: Study through Research, contains adapted versions of three of the field’s groundbreaking articles along with background material, supplementary explanations, graphs and definitions. But the basic style and feel of the scientific papers were preserved, including the layout of the sections (abstract, introduction, methods, results and discussion) and the typical phrasing. In the process of creating the study materials, Yarden and her group found they had created a new genre of science writing, which they dubbed Adapted Primary Literature (APL). A second book followed the first: Gene Tamers: Studying Biotechnology through Research, and the books – used to teach matriculation-level biology – and the project behind them have begun to garner interest and spawn similar initiatives around the world.

Ultimately, Yarden would like to see APL used to teach areas of all the biology subjects studied for matriculation exams in high schools. As there is no shortage of exciting new scientific research, the articles could be continually updated, making the curriculum varied and pertinent. To help accomplish these goals, Yarden is bringing her method to those who teach science. Within the framework of the Caesarea Program – initiated this year at the Weizmann Institute to provide graduate education to outstanding high school teachers – she is starting a journal club. The club will encourage the teachers to read scientific articles, adapt them and use them in their classrooms. In this way, she hopes to extend the use of the method to more classrooms, as well as to broaden the subjects taught this way to include such fields as chemistry and physics.   

Dr. Anat Yarden’s research is supported by the J&R Center for Scientific Research. Dr. Yarden is the incumbent of the Helena Rubinstein Career Development Chair.

 

Dr. Anat Yarden.
Science Teaching
English
Yes

By Its Shape

English
 
The ISPC team: Standing (l-r) Dr. Harry Mark Greenblatt, Dr. Jaime Prilusky, Prof. Yigal Burstein, Prof. Israel Silman, Dr. Tamar Unger, Dr. Orly Dym, Dr. Yoav Peleg and Anat Kats. Middle (l-r) David Mualem, Anna Branzburg-Mualem, ISPC Head Prof. Joel L. Sussman, Prof. Gideon Schreiber, Meital Rubin-Yona and Ada Dantes. Front (l-r) Dr. Shira Albeck, Rani Bravdo, Reut Rotem-Bernehim, Moshe Ben David and Bracha Vakni. No protein too tough

Can one ever tell what’s in a pitcher just by looking at its shape? In the field of structural proteomics – the study of protein structure – shape is the key to understanding a protein’s biological activities. “Solving the spatial structure of proteins gives scientists information on protein functions and properties that’s impossible to obtain in any other way. With this information, we can raise new scientific questions, design advanced experiments and point the way to more efficient drug design,” says Prof. Joel L. Sussman, Head of the Israel Structural Proteomics Center (ISPC) at the Weizmann Institute.



Indeed, working in close collaboration with research scientists to advance the study of proteins and their functions in the body has been the hallmark of the ISPC since its inception five years ago. This approach, which pairs the protein-solving expertise of the ISPC team with scientific groups investigating the actions of specific proteins, was ahead of its time; it has since been adopted by a number of such proteomics centers around the world. The Israeli center, founded by Institute Profs. Sussman, Gideon Schreiber, Israel Silman and Yigal Burstein, is a central node in a European network of structural proteomics research centers. With support from Israel’s Ministry of Science, the Divadol Foundation and the EU, it offers its services to research scientists at the Weizmann Institute and other research institutes in Israel and around the globe, as well as to physicians and researchers in the biotechnology and biomedical industries.

 


“Thanks to the work of the ISPC team,” says Schreiber, “the Weizmann Institute is well in the lead of the enormous worldwide effort to unravel the mysteries of protein structure.” This team, including Drs. Orly Dym, Tamar Unger, Shira Albeck and Yoav Peleg, sees each project through from beginning to end – from laying out the initial research plan through the various stages of cloning the gene encoding the protein, isolating and purifying it, crystallizing it, determining the structure of the crystallized protein and, finally, creating a 3-D model of the protein structure. What makes the work challenging is that each protein has a unique “personality,” and creating just the right conditions to get it to turn into a crystal and reveal that personality often takes ingenuity and patience.



In addition to solving protein structures, the ISPC offers assistance and advice to students and research groups, and also produces a number of proteins for use in biochemical and biomedical research. Of the more than 100 proteins purified by the team in the past five years, and the 40 protein structures they have solved, several have recently appeared in various scientific publications:

The right concentration

enzyme for polyamine regulation

Polyamines are small molecules found in all living cells; they’re necessary for such fundamental cellular processes as the production of proteins and nucleic acids, fixing chromosome structure and regulating gene expression. Too low a level of polyamines inhibits cellular proliferation, while overly high levels can have a toxic effect. Cells contain a network of proteins whose concerted action keeps polyamine levels optimal. In a study that appeared in Protein Science, the ISPC team, together with Prof. Chaim Kahana of the Molecular Genetics Department, revealed details of the structure and working mechanisms of a key regulator that sets the rate for polyamine production.

 

Contact points

 

p120 for cell contact and motility

Prof. Alexander Bershadsky of the Molecular Cell Biology Department and his team research the activities of a protein, p120, that is involved in creating contact points between neighboring cells, and which appears to stimulate the formation of protrusions that enhance cell motility. The ISPC team succeeded in purifying p120 along with another protein, cortactin, involved in the assembly of the actin fibers that play a role in forming the protrusions. In research that was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), USA, Bershadsky’s group used the purified proteins to show that p120 directly regulates cortactin activity, thus elucidating the role of this protein in cell motility.

 

Natural bug killers

 

toxic Bt protein

The bacterium Bacillus thuringinesis kills insects by destroying their cell membranes. In a collaborative effort, the ISPC team, together with Prof. Arieh Zaritsky and Shmulik Cohen of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, solved the 3-D structure of one of the bacterial proteins responsible for its lethal action. These findings suggested to them the poison’s mode of action, as well as an explanation for it high toxicity. The study, which appeared in the Journal of Molecular Biology, may help researchers develop new natural pesticides, as well as drugs to destroy cancer cells.  


Prof. Joel L. Sussman’s research is supported by the Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman Center for Biomolecular Structure and Assembly; Mr. and Mrs. Yossie Hollander, Israel; the Jean and Jula Goldwurm Memorial Foundation; the Bruce and Rosalie N. Rosen Family Foundation; Mr. and Mrs. Nicolas Neuman, Mexico; Mr. Erwin Pearl, New York, NY; and the Nalvyco Trust. Prof. Sussman is the incumbent of the Morton and Gladys Pickman Professorial Chair in Structural Biology.
 
Prof. Gideon Schreiber’s research is supported by the Clore Center for Biological Physics; the Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman Center for Biomolecular Structure and Assembly; and Mr. and Mrs. Yossie Hollander, Israel.
 
Prof. Chaim Kahana’s research is supported by the Norman and Helen Asher Center for Brain Imaging; the Leo and Julia Forchheimer Center for Molecular Genetics; the Kahn Family Research Center for Systems Biology of the Human Cell; and the Wolfson Family Charitable Trust. Prof. Kahana is the incumbent of the Jules J. Mallon Chair of Biochemistry.
 
Prof. Alexander Bershadsky’s research is supported by the PW-Iris Foundation. Prof. Bershadsky is the incumbent of the Joseph Moss Professorial Chair of Biomedical Research.
 
 
The ISPC team: Standing (l-r) Dr. Harry Mark Greenblatt, Dr. Jaime Prilusky, Prof. Yigal Burstein, Prof. Israel Silman, Dr. Tamar Unger, Dr. Orly Dym, Dr. Yoav Peleg and Anat Kats. Middle (l-r) David Mualem, Anna Branzburg-Mualem, ISPC Head Prof. Joel L. Sussman, Prof. Gideon Schreiber, Meital Rubin-Yona and Ada Dantes. Front (l-r) Dr. Shira Albeck, Rani Bravdo, Reut Rotem-Bernehim, Moshe Ben David and Bracha Vakni.
Chemistry
English

Local Color

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Prof. Valeri Krongauz and his team. self-tinting glasses in all colors
 
 

 

Prof. Valeri Krongauz is not content with seeing life only through rose-tinted glasses. His research has made it possible to manufacture self-tinting eyeglasses that, upon exposure to the sun, darken and assume any color of the spectrum, from yellow to red to blue.
 
Krongauz, a professor emeritus in the Weizmann Institute’s Organic Chemistry Department, is one of the world’s leading experts on organic photochromic materials – carbon-based substances that change color when exposed to bright light. One of his inventions has led to the establishment of Chromtech Ltd., a company in the Rabin Science Park adjacent to the Institute that sells photochromic materials to manufacturers of self-tinting eyeglasses.
 
Due to the complexity and the costs involved in making self-tinting plastic lenses, only a handful of large companies worldwide possess the necessary technology. Other lens manufacturers – along with manufacturers of self-tinting films for car windows – can now purchase self-tinting material from Chromtech in powder form.
 
A major advantage of Chromtech’s photochromic materials is that, thanks to their intense tinting ability, they can be either dissolved within the plastic lens or used as a component of a thin coating. The coating, which is stable and highly sensitive, can be easily applied to the surface of any plastic lens. Its darkening results from a relatively minor molecular event: A photochromic structure changes its color when it absorbs a photon of light, which breaks just one of its chemical bonds; once the light disappears, the bond bounces back into place and the structure returns to its original color.
 
Organic photochromic materials were discovered at the Weizmann Institute in 1952. At the height of the Cold War, the substances attracted the attention of Soviet scientists, who sought to use them for making protective goggles against the blinding radiation emitted after the explosion of an atomic bomb. Krongauz, who worked at the time in a large physical chemistry institute in Moscow, stayed clear of the military research because, like many other Soviet Jews, he was concerned that knowledge of military secrets might later prevent him from leaving the country. Besides, he was drawn to basic research, and he focused on fundamental studies of photochromic materials, which, apart from posing interesting scientific questions, attracted him by their aesthetic beauty.
 
After immigrating to Israel and joining the Weizmann Institute in 1976, he made groundbreaking contributions to the theory of photochromism and other areas of organic chemistry, and conducted pioneering research in an area today known as nanoscience. One of his applied projects led to the establishment of Chromtech, which Krongauz, now its chief technology officer, founded in 1999 together with Amram Masad, the company’s president and CEO, under a license from Weizmann’s Yeda Research and Development Co. Ltd.
 
Chromtech today employs half a dozen chemists, all from Russia and all holding Ph.D. degrees. One of the company’s potential future projects is to develop self-tinting intraocular lenses, the implants inserted during eye surgery when the eye’s natural lens is clouded by a cataract. Another promising development is the plasma technology for applying a very thin layer of the self-tinting material as a vapor under vacuum conditions. Chromtech’s sales have been growing steadily over the past few years and seem likely to continue to grow – a good reason for optimism, even without wearing rose-tinted glasses.
 
Amram Masad, Dr. Boris Perlmutter, Dr. Alexander Shif, Prof. Valeri Krongauz and Drs. Judith Ratner, Lev Pinkin and Dmitry Fridland. Bright future
Chemistry
English

Going for Green

English
 
Prof. Uri Pick. better biofuel
 
Prof. Avihai Danon. Alga genetics
 
 
 
 

Oil from Algae

 

What are the best crops to grow for biofuels? Corn and sugarcane, presently converted to ethanol in Brazil and the USA, consume large amounts of petrochemicals and arable land in cultivation, and using them for fuel is already beginning to drive up the price of food. The contribution of soybean- and canola-based biodiesel in Europe to overall fuel consumption is small and cannot be extended. A better alternative, according to a number of scientists, may be lying under the nearest rock or floating on a stagnant pond: algae.
 
Algae have a number of advantages over other sources of biofuel. For one, they can be grown on marginal soil or in salt water, without draining water resources. For another, they grow rapidly and could be harvested regularly throughout the year. And there is no waste – no seeds, stems or roots to discard. Algae plantations placed near power plants would capture much of the emitted carbon dioxide to use as building blocks for biofuel, thus creating “green energy.”

 

Finally, some kinds of algae produce oil – up to 50% of their mass. This oil, says Prof. Avihai Danon of the Institute’s Plant Science Department, can be easily xtracted and converted to bio-diesel, which could be used in today’s diesel engines without significant investment. Algae could yield an estimated 30 times the oil output of the best crop plants, and could satisfy the fuel needs of the USA and other heavily industrialized countries around the world.
 
Danon and Prof. Uri Pick of the Biological Chemistry Department have begun a new project that aims to create strains of algae that will excel at generating oil for biofuel. Their first step is to understand how and when the algae produce the oil. Like green plants, algae get their energy from the sun and store it as sugars or oils. But there is a limit to how much energy one alga – a single-celled organism – can utilize. In fact, too much sunlight can overload the alga’s system, stimulating the production of free radicals that can harm or even kill the cell. This limit creates a trade-off between oil production and growth, and the cell must decide in which to invest its energy. The scientists suspect that it is in times of stress that the algae build up their stores of oil.
 
The researchers are working on several different strains of algae that grow in different conditions and have different traits. They are developing the tools to identify and compare the genes that regulate the algal metabolism, making decisions whether to stockpile oil or spread out, whether to take in additional sunlight or put up protective sunscreens. “Once we’ve identified the genes, we should be able to develop the means to control these processes in the algae ourselves,” says Danon, “and hopefully create algae that can be an excellent, environmentally friendly source of fuel.”    
 

Prof. Ed Bayer. Solving two problems with one bacterial complex

 
 

Recycled Fuel

 
While the debate rages over the ecological and economic value of using food crops to produce fuel, Weizmann Institute scientists are taking a different approach that could potentially solve two environmental problems with one stone – or at least one bacterial enzyme complex.
 
One of the obstacles to creating biofuels from organic substances such as agricultural waste is that they contain large amounts of tough materials – mainly cellulose – that do not break down easily. (Corn and sugarcane, on the other hand, are rich in starch and sugar that can easily be turned into ethanol.) Prof. Ed Bayer of the Biological Chemistry Department has been researching bacteria that chew up cellulose, converting it to sugar that they then feed on. In the 1980s Bayer, together with Prof. Raphael Lamed of Tel Aviv University, discovered how the bacteria’s cellulose-degrading machinery works. The cellulosome, as they dubbed this molecular machine, is a group of enzymes that work as a team to chop up the long chains of repeating sugar units in cellulose molecules into short sugars that can be dissolved in water.
 
About 50 percent of landfill material is cellulose, mostly in the form of paper, and it continues to pile up year after year.
 
Breakdown is slow, partly due to landfill conditions and partly because the cellulose in such man-made products as paper turns out to be particularly hard for the bacterial cellulosome to digest. Bayer began tinkering with cellulosomes, adapting the bacterial machinery for turning plant cellulose into sugar into an effective tool for recycling paper. He and Lamed used genetic engineering techniques to create hundreds of different versions of the cellulosome, mixing and matching parts in their search for those that excelled at their new task. Prof. Gideon Schreiber, an expert in designing and altering protein-protein interactions, and Prof. Dan Tawfik, an expert in enzyme evolution, have joined the team to help design artificial cellulosomes with improved activity. The most recent version of the artificial cellulosome can potentially turn a lab dish full of finely shredded paper into simple sugar syrup in about a day.
 
Recently, this research has taken on new urgency. The simple sugars churned out in the process are ideal for conversion to ethanol, and the artificial cellulosome might be adapted to other cellulose-rich energy resources such as agricultural waste. Much research remains to be done before the process can be recreated efficiently on the industrial scale, Bayer cautions. Nonetheless, one day our cars may run on ethanol brewed from recycled trash.

 

Prof. Dan Tawfik. Hydrogen-producing bacterium

 

 

Fuel of the Fittest

 

If algae and bacteria can be engineered to produce such bio-fuels as biodiesel and ethanol, might they also generate such futuristic energy resources as hydrogen? Hydrogen could be the cleanest fuel of all, as its combustion leaves behind only water. But most present-day methods of producing hydrogen still involve processing fossil fuels.
 
In an ambitious project, a consortium of scientists from France, Spain, Sweden, the UK, Portugal and Israel, including Prof. Dan Tawfik of the Biological Chemistry Department, are investigating the possibility of creating a bacterium that will produce hydrogen cleanly and economically. The researchers have started with a strain of cyanobacteria (often called blue-green algae, though they are not true algae). These photosynthetic, single-celled organisms have a long history of producing materials we need: They’re credited with releasing oxygen into the early atmosphere (paving the way for the evolution of oxygen-breathing animals), and with fixing nitrogen in soils so that plants such as rice can absorb it.
 
The researchers plan to use a cutting-edge approach to developing the new bacteria. Rather than adapting one or two existing genes, they aim to equip the cyanobacteria with a whole new set of biological components engineered for specific functions. The multidisciplinary team will use a slew of techniques to accomplish this, including one developed by Tawfik – directing the evolution of enzymes in cell culture to produce cellular components that are highly efficient at carrying out desirable tasks.   

Prof. Ed Bayer’s research is supported by Mr. and Mrs. Yossie Hollander, Israel. Prof. Bayer is the incumbent of the Maynard I. and Elaine Wishner Chair of Bio-Organic Chemistry.
 
Prof. Avihai Danon’s research is supported by the Edward D. and Anna Mitchell Research Fund; and Mr. and Mrs. Yossie Hollander, Israel. Prof. Danon is the incumbent of the Henry and Bertha Benson Professorial Chair.
 
Prof. Uri Pick’s research is supported by Mr. and Mrs. Yossie Hollander, Israel.
Prof. Pick is the incumbent of the Charles and Louise Gartner Professorial Chair.
 
 
Prof. Gideon Schreiber’s research is supported by the Clore Center for Biological Physics; the Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman Center for Biomolecular Structure and Assembly; and Mr. and Mrs. Yossie Hollander, Israel.
 
Prof. Dan Tawfik’s research is supported by the J&R Center for Scientific Research; the Jack Wolgin Prize for Scientific Excellence; Mr. and Mrs. Yossie Hollander, Israel; Mr. Rowland Schaefer, New York, NY; and the estate of Fannie Sherr, New York, NY. Prof.  Tawfik is the incumbent of the Elaine Blond Career Development Chair.
 

 

Environment
English

A Never-Ending Story

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Dr. Moshe Levy. Then
 
 
 
Fifty years ago, a young Israeli scientist took part in the discovery of a chemical process that now forms the basis of multi-billion-dollar polymer and nanotechnology industries. And the discoverer? He still wears sneakers and shorts.
 
Polymers are molecular “trains” composed of identical small molecules, or “cars,” linked one after the other in a long chain. Creating a polymer, like writing a story, has three stages: beginning, middle (addition of molecules to the chain) and end (the end of production). Fifty years ago, Prof. (then Dr.) Moshe Levy, working in the laboratory of Prof. Michael Szwarc in the U.S., found a way to prevent the third stage from taking place – creating polymers that continue to grow longer, as long as they are supplied with new “cars.” Using the story-writing analogy, one could say that he managed to find a formula for creating a never-ending story.
 
The inventors called these chemical chains “living polymers.” One of their features was that all chains growing in the same system reached the same length. As the scientists could control this length by altering the building block supply, they were able to control the polymers’ physical properties. Over the course of the past fifty years, this discovery has turned into a fundamental principle underlying the plastics and synthetic rubber industries. It has also provided the momentum for developing macromolecular architectures and various nanotechnology applications.
 
Moshe Levy started out in 1946, working as a technician in the laboratory of Dr. Bruno Rosenfeld in what was then the Daniel Sieff Research Institute. Dr. Chaim Weizmann granted him an Institute scholarship to study at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. However, Israel’s War of Independence broke out two months into his studies, and Levy was called to serve in the Haganah, the pre-state Jewish defense organization.
 
After the war, he completed his studies at the Hebrew University and transferred to the laboratory of Szwarc at the State University of New York at Syracuse, where he received his doctoral degree and went on to postdoctoral research. Szwarc, a winner of the prestigious Kyoto Prize and considered one of the greatest physical chemists of all times, had studied at the Hebrew University under Moshe Weizmann, Chaim Weizmann’s brother. Thus, Szwarc and Levy were both far from home when they first discovered the living polymers.
Levy decided to pack his belongings and go back to Israel. His work in the U.S. on living polymers was carried on by another Israeli – then postdoctoral fellow Dr. Joseph Jagur. Both scientists eventually joined the Weizmann Institute, where they carried on their research for many years.
 
Profs. Jagur and Levy, who have recently retired, still work in the Weizmann Institute’s Perlman Building, continuing to develop new ideas and carefully documenting the basic discoveries that have since become the province of industry. Jagur has written three books on this topic. The third, published several months ago, is dedicated entirely to living polymers and the magic of a never-ending story.   
 
Dr. Moshe Levy. Then
Chemistry
English

Fueling the Future

English
Illustration: multidisciplinary research towards sustainable energy
 

 

"Developing alternative means of producing energy in the forms that humankind needs is crucial to dealing with the ongoing energy crisis,” Weizmann Institute President Prof. Ilan Chet said recently. He went on: “Creating fresh, sustainable methods of satisfying the world’s energy needs will be possible only if we can gain the knowledge to invent completely new technologies. The Weizmann Institute of Science has an obligation to take a lead in global efforts in this field. We believe we can help shape the planet’s future.”
 
Prof. Chet was referring to an ambitious multidisciplinary research initiative launched by the Weizmann Institute of Science. The scientists involved in the new Initiative for Research in Sustainable and Alternative Energy aim to significantly advance the search for solutions to the world’s most pressing energy problems. 
 
The global energy crisis is a complex problem that involves challenges on the political, economic and scientific fronts. The demand for energy has risen sharply in recent years, fueled by rapidly rising standards of living and expanding populations, especially in industrializing countries such as China and India. If nothing is done to change current patterns, energy demand will rise nearly 60% by the year 2030. Nonrenewable energy sources such as fossil fuels are running out; petroleum-based fuel supplies could be held hostage to political upheavals, affecting the peace and security of Israel and the entire world. The continuing upward spiral of oil prices also threatens the stability of the global economy. As long as energy consumption continues to rise, burning fossil fuels will be a major cause of air pollution, including the accumulation of greenhouse gases in the upper atmosphere, which may already be causing global warming.   
 
Many Weizmann Institute scientists are concerned about this state of affairs, and a number of them have recently made a commitment to join in the search for energy solutions. Says Prof. Mordechai Sheves, Dean of the Faculty of Chemistry: “The special nature of the Weizmann Institute, with its emphasis on multidisciplinary scientific cooperation, makes it one of the most promising places in which to pursue such solutions.” 
 
Institute scientists are already applying a number of original approaches to producing alternative energy. One example is the manufacture of methanol (currently extracted from fossil fuels) using the sun’s energy. If the method proves successful, it may in the future provide a relatively clean, renewable and environmentally friendly fuel. 
 
Scientists from many disciplines will conduct research under the aegis of the sustainable energy initiative. Various research groups in physics and chemistry, for example, will focus on energy conversion, storage and conservation, adding to several projects at the Institute that are already showing progress in converting the sun’s energy to electricity and fuel. A research team in the life sciences plans to investigate ways of utilizing plants and biomass as energy sources. Other scientists are carrying out basic research in nuclear fusion, while new lubricants containing nanomaterials developed at the Institute promise to increase the efficiency of machinery, thereby reducing fuel consumption.
 
The Weizmann Institute plans to raise significant funds for the Initiative so that cutting-edge energy research can move forward at the pace needed to find timely answers. The plan calls for recruiting promising young scientists as well as established researchers to join the effort and share their expertise with the Institute's multidisciplinary task force of leading scientists. With this impetus to advanced research and innovation, the Weizmann Institute intends to lead the way in finding new and better solutions to meet the world’s growing energy needs. 
Illustration: multidisciplinary research towards sustainable energy
Environment
English

Beaming across the Border

English
Site of the new-used accelerator
 
 

 

Aladdin spoke the magic word "Sesame!" to open doors. Likewise, the SESAME project (Synchrotron-light for Experimental Science and Applications in the Middle East) stands to open doors that have for many years shut off the scientists of different countries from one another. The synchrotron, which is under construction at Al-Balqa’ Applied University near Al-Salt, Jordan, will serve scientists in Israel, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, the Palestinian Authority, the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, Iran and Pakistan, with other, European, scientists participating as observers.

A synchrotron is a large, ring-shaped pipe in which electrons are accelerated to near-light speeds. As they whiz through the pipe, the electrons emit radiation, such as X rays. In research stations situated around the facility, scientists perform experiments using this radiation. Although the synchrotron is a sort of particle accelerator, such as those used in nuclear physics research, many scientists employ it as a giant microscope that allows them to observe things at the scale of molecules and atoms. SESAME will have five different beam lines, making it valuable for research in nanotechnology, atomic medicine, spectroscopy, atomic and molecular physics, archaeology, environmental science and more.

Structural biologists, for instance, rely on synchrotrons to unravel the three-dimensional structures of proteins - an essential step in understanding how they work as well as in creating new and better drugs. To solve a protein’s three-dimensional structure, scientists crystallize the protein and then bombard it with strong X-ray radiation. As the rays bounce off the crystal, they create a pattern that, after analysis, yields the structure of the protein molecule.

With a capacity of 2.5 GeV (2.5 billion electron volts) and an accelerator ring circumference of 125 meters, the synchrotron is mid-sized - smaller than the three giant synchrotrons in the U.S., Japan and France - but it will have boosters to up that capacity if needed
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The idea of a Middle Eastern synchrotron was first suggested by Prof. Herman Winick of the Stanford Linear Accelerator in Palo Alto, California. Winick recently received the New York Academy of Sciences Heinz R. Pagels Human Rights Award, in part for his work on SESAME. A number of Israeli scientists, including the Weizmann Institute’s Profs. Irit Sagi and Joel Sussman of the Structural Biology Department, have been actively involved in the project. Instead of flying five hours to Grenoble each time he or one of his colleagues wants to carry out an experiment, says Sussman, "I thought it would be good, when possible, to drive a few hours and be able to return home that evening or the next day."

The final green light for the project came in 1997, with the decision to close down the BESSY-1 accelerator in Germany. Rather than junk the old accelerator, it was agreed to fix it, upgrading the facility to meet the demands of modern, cutting-edge science; and thus the German government donated it to the Middle East project. Jordan was chosen as a "good place in the middle," and construction commenced in 1998. If all goes well, SESAME will begin operating in 2009.

Just as scientific cooperation between Germany and Israel in the 1960s helped pave the way to full political and economic ties, those involved in SESAME hope that their example can spur other types of regional cooperation. Already, the project is an exemplary model of cross-cultural participation. For instance, the synchrotron’s Italian technical director, Dr. Gaetano Vignola, works with a skilled team of Jordanians, Palestinians, Iranians, Moroccans and Turks. The head of the SESAME council is Prof. Herwig Schopper from Switzerland, and the scientific director, Prof. Khaled Toukan, is also Jordan’s Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research. The Weizmann Institute’s Prof. Sagi is a member of the project’s international steering committee.

Participation in workshops has already led to the creation of a regional scientific network and an exchange program for students and young scientists that exposes promising Arab researchers to global science. Israel’s participation and investment in the project are seen in a positive light by the other partners. Chaim Weizmann, the first President of the State of Israel and of the Weizmann Institute, had a vision over 50 years ago that science could play an important role in bringing peace to the region. SESAME may help to prove him right.
 
Prof. Irit Sagi's research is supported by the Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman Center for Biomolecular Structure and Assembly; the Joseph and Ceil Mazer Center for Structural Biology; the Avron-Wilstaetter Minerva Center; the Laub Fund for Oncogene Research; Verband der Chemischen Industrie; and the Cymerman-Jakubskind Prize. Prof. Sagi is the incumbent of the Maurizio Pontecorvo Professorial Chair.

Prof. Joel Sussman's research is supported by the Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman Center for Biomolecular Structure and Assembly; the Joseph and Ceil Mazer Center for Structural Biology; the Divadol Foundation; the Jean and Jula Goldwurm Memorial Foundation; the Kalman and Ida Wolens Foundation; the Wolfson Family Charitable Trust; the Bruce and Rosalie N. Rosen Family Foundation; and the Estate of Sally Schnitzer, New York, NY. Prof. Sussman is the incumbent of the Morton and Gladys Pickman Professorial Chair in Structural Biology.


SESAME building illustration

 

 

SESAME plans

 
Countries in the SESAME project
Space & Physics
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Institute News

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Prof. Daniel Zajfman

 
 
Mr. Mandy Moross of London, Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Weizmann Institute of Science, announced that the Institute's nominating committee has recommended to the Board of Governors that Prof. Daniel Zajfman be elected to the office of President of the Weizmann Institute.
 
The committee's recommendation comes at the end of a process that lasted a number of months. A presidential search committee, which included scientific and lay members of the Board of Governors in Israel and abroad, as well as additional faculty members from the Institute, unanimously selected Prof. Zajfman as its choice for president. Their recommendation was confirmed by the nominating committee of the Board of Governors headed by Mandy Moross. In accordance with the rules of the Institute, the election of the president will be approved by the full Board. Prof. Zajfman will serve as the tenth president of the Weizmann Institute, replacing the current president, Prof. Ilan Chet. Prof. Chet's term of office ends in December 2006.
 
Prof. Daniel Zajfman was born in Belgium in 1959 and moved to Israel in 1979. He received a B.Sc. in 1983 and a Ph.D. in 1989 from the Technion, in Haifa, in atomic physics. He then completed postdoctoral research at the Argonne National Laboratory in Chicago. In 1991, he returned to the Weizmann Institute as a senior scientist in the Particle Physics Department. In 1997, he was appointed associate professor and was promoted to full professor in 2003. Today, he serves as Head of the Physics Services Unit. Since 2001, he has been an external member of the Max Planck Institute of Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg, Germany, and in 2005 he was made a Director of this Max Planck Institute. In this capacity, he is currently overseeing a 4.5-million- euro project to construct an ion storage ring that will work at a temperature approaching absolute zero.
 
Prof. Zajfman's research focuses on the reaction dynamics of small molecules and how they influence the composition of the interstellar medium. He recreates the conditions of outer space in the lab using special devices called ion "traps" or "storage rings." In these devices, he is able to briefly store and measure the properties of small amounts of material, as little as a few hundred atoms or molecules worth, under the extreme conditions of interstellar space (especially very low temperatures and low densities). Some of his research has focused on the puzzle of how complex mole-cules are formed in outer space.
 
In addition to his research, Prof. Zajfman has invested much time and effort in community outreach - to the public in general and youth in particular. His goal is to broaden interest in and knowledge of the advances taking place on the scientific front.
 
Prof. Zajfman is married to Joelle, who has an M.Sc. in physics and works as a sculptor, and he is the father of Eyal (17) and Noga (15).
 

New Chairman for the Israeli Association of Friends

 
Shimshon Harel has recently been elected Chairman of the Board of the Association of Friends of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel, after having been a member of that Board for the past 12 years. Former CEO of Bank Leumi Investments Co. Ltd. and deputy CEO of Africa-Israel Investments Co. Ltd., Harel is currently co-CEO of America-Israel Investments Co. Ltd., which specializes in real estate investments in Israel and abroad. He serves on the boards of governors of several industrial companies and is also a member of the Weizmann Institute's Board of Governors and of the Board's Audit Committee.

Shimshon Harel

 
Prof. Daniel Zajfman: the next president of the Weizmann Institute
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