Elizabeth Villa

Molecular Biology

Professor

Research Focus
Structural cell biology, cryo-electron microscopy, multiscale modeling

Research Summary

Macromolecules rarely operate in isolation inside cells. At any given time, the average protein is part of a complex of over 10 macromolecules, and these supramolecular complexes are in turn embedded in intricate networks inside cells. Professor Villa's lab is broadly interested in revealing the structure and function of macromolecular complexes in their natural environment at the highest possible resolution to reveal their structural dynamics and interactions. They call it bringing structure to cellular biology.

The lab has a strong focus on building tools for quantitative cell biology, using cryo-electron microscopy and tomography, cell biophysics, computational analysis, and integrative modeling. This potent combination allows us to look at macromolecular complexes in their native environment and derive their structure, context, and interaction partners.

Their biological focus is on the study of the nuclear periphery, as nuclear biology remains one of the most exciting challenges in the cell, and it is uncharted territory structurally. Their thrust in this area includes projects such as the structural dynamics of the yeast nuclear pore complex, the mechanical communication between the cytoskeleton and the nucleus, and the molecular architecture of the genome and its association with the nuclear envelope. The lab also collaborates with different laboratories to open windows into various cellular events. These projects tend to have a translational component and include studying the inner life of bacteria and studying the effects of LRRK2 on Parkinson’s disease, among others.

Elizabeth Villa
Lab Website
Email:
evilla@ucsd.edu

Bio

Professor Villa is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator and a Professor of Molecular Biology in the School of Biological Sciences at the University of California San Diego. She completed her PhD in Biophysics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign as a Fulbright Fellow. She was a Marie Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at the Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry in Munich. She was recruited to UC San Diego in 2014. Dr. Villa was the recipient of an NIH Director’s New Innovator Award to pursue high-risk high-reward research developing cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) and new technological and computational techniques to advance structural cell biology. She was named a Pew Scholar in 2017, and she was selected to become a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator in 2021.