When the LSC opened its doors back in 2008, recalls Professor of Physiology , Theme Lead for Cell Information Systems, it suddenly became very easy to attract the best molecular and cell biologists from all over the world.
Access to the cutting-edge equipment housed within the Complex and a highly collaborative environment comprising open-concept labs and shared workspaces have been key to the LSCâs continued success in bringing in promising young researchers. This was accomplished by close collaboration with the Chair of the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Professor and former Chair of the Department of Physiology, Professor , both members of the Cell Information Systems Theme. The recent hires include Assistant Professor of Pharmacology and Therapeutics , Assistant Professors of Physiology Reza Sharif-Naeini and , as well as Associate Professor of Physiology . âThese recruitments would not have been possible without this Complex,â says Professor Shrier. âIt brought people together.â âScience is a collaborative discipline,â adds Professor Orlowski. âRegardless of where your lab is, youâre collaborating with people all over the world. But nothing facilitates collaborative interactions more than being in close proximity with the people you work with.â
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Both Professors Shrier and Orlowski were with the LSC from the beginning and acknowledge the huge impact the facilities have had on their own research. Professor Shrierâs work on sudden cardiac death has been transformed by a partnership with Professor of Physiology and cystic fibrosis researcher Gergely Lukacs. âWe were able to translate approaches heâs used for cystic fibrosis research and offer an expertise that I wouldnât have had otherwise,â he says. Professor Lukacs is also a member of the Cystic FibrosisTranslational Research Centre (CFTRc) headed by Professor , another member of the Cell Information Systems Theme. The LSC played an important role in the creation of the CFTRc. âIn addition, Professor Orlowskiâs neuronal studies with Professor of Pharmacology and Therapeutics Anne McKinney happened only because weâre next door neighbors.â Professor Orlowski agrees: âMoving to this building has really opened a whole new area for my lab and also broadened the scope of the other collaborators Iâve been working with.â
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The Cell Information Systems group has, in its 10 years at the LSC, made a number of important advances in cell biology research. Professor Orlowskiâs lab has identified a new form of nonsyndromic intellectual disability characterized by moderate to severe cognitive dysfunction.
Professor of Pharmacology and Therapeutics âs lab has pinpointed a critical role of a family of âhelperâ proteins that modify neurotransmitter receptors called AMPA receptors, adding to our understanding of human behaviour and brain disease. New findings from Professor Lukacsâ lab suggest that a cocktail of molecules can improve epithelial function in cystic fibrosis, and could lead to new therapies for up to 50% of patients. None of this would have been possible without shared infrastructure resources, including the collection of cutting-edge imaging and microscopy equipment housed within the Advanced BioImaging Facility (ABIF) of the LSC. The management, maintenance and training related to this equipment, all overseen by Associate Professor of Physiology and Director of the ABIF, , really sets the LSC apart, says Professor Shrier. âI canât underscore the issue of professionalism strongly enough: Professor Brown and her team provide leadership in this area, not just for us but across the entire Life Sciences Complex,â he says. âNobody can use any of the instrumentation without being trained. Without the expertise, itâs like having a Ferrari but nobody knows how to drive it.â The ABIF has run more than 80 workshops and courses and trained thousands of researchers since the LSC opened including the international Montreal Light Microscopy Course. The Brown laboratory develops novel live cell imaging techniques and has applied them to understand why cancer cells respond to growth factors and move much faster while normal cells do not.The LSC is also pioneering the development of its own customized lab instrumentation. For example, in his neuroscience lab, Professor Krishnaswamy programs his own virtual environments and microscope systems and uses a 3-D printer to produce them. âAnd theyâre sharing it with everybody. In fact, Professor Krishnaswamy wants to run a boot camp on the weekend to show people how to use these tools,â says Professor Shrier.
Itâs a give and take process, notes Pierre Rochon, a PhD candidate working in Professor Krishnaswamyâs lab who uses these tools to study the visual system of mice to understand the circuit patterns that lay the foundation for the developing brain. When he joined Professor Krishnaswamyâs lab about a year ago, the infrastructure was still being set up. âMeanwhile, Professor Reza Sharif-Naeini had a surgery room that was established and we got involved with him while we got our surgery room up and going,â says Mr. Rochon. âWe were able to ask around when we were developing our protocols and installing all the infrastructure, so we could be at the place we are. So in this building the fact that everybody is in such close proximity really helped in that regard.â
To read more about the Cell Information Systems theme and some of its research breakthroughs of the past 10 years, click here.
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