An Ark-Full of Scientific Wonders in a Lab Inspired by Woods Hole

At Harvard, Nick Bellono Creates an MBL-Style Lab for Curiosity-Driven Research
91לThe MBL is definitely the reason I91יm a scientist,91ם claims Nicholas Bellono, an energetic associate professor of molecular and cellular biology at Harvard University.
Inspired by his vision of 91לan MBL-style group in which people could explore whatever they are curious about and do it without the constraint of a particular animal model or technique,91ם Bellono established his biodiverse Harvard lab in 2018, he recently told
Over the past five years, more than 100 animal species have cycled through Bellono91יs lab as he 91לauditions91ם them as systems for discovering the molecules that drive animal adaptations and behaviors. Many of the animals he has chosen to study 91ד octopus, squid, sea robins, little skates, sharks, sea anemones 91ד stretch back to his experiences at MBL.
91לI believe comparative biology is incredibly powerful,91ם Bellono told Current Biology. 91לAnd, simply put, looking somewhere new can teach us something new.91ם
91לToo Good To be True91ם: Falling in Love with Science at the MBL
91לLike many, my first summer in Woods Hole made a huge impression on me,91ם Bellono told Current Biology. 91לIt91יs a special place in which everyone is highly curious and excited about their work, does creative and fun experiments all day and night, and then hangs out at the beach.91ם
Bellono hadn91יt yet considered a career as a scientist, but his MBL summer dramatically changed that. 91לI thought: I could get paid to get a Ph.D. and hang out on the beach between playing around with cool animals? This seemed too good to be true.91ם

Then an undergraduate at Michigan State, Bellono came to Woods Hole through , who invited him to spend a summer working in her MBL Whitman Center lab. To this day, Bellono is grateful to Eisthen for the opportunity, which ended up lighting and inspiring his career path.
Bellono went on to graduate school at Brown University, where he studied cell physiology and neuroscience. His interests led him back to the MBL in 2014, specifically to the summer lab of of Yale University, a prominent scientist in the field of electrophysiology (measuring the electrical activity of living cells).
91לI was trying to establish a preparation for measuring the electrical activity of pigment-producing organelles inside skin cells,91ם Bellono says. 91לThis experiment involved placing a pipette inside of another pipette to gain access to the organelle (think of Alien with the mouth inside the mouth). A rare example of this experiment had come from the MBL in squid axons by Liz Jonas.91ם

Bellono visited Jonas at MBL for instruction and 91לIt sort of worked 91צ Well, I couldn91יt quite do what Liz pulled off. But as you91יll appreciate as a theme from my MBL stories, Liz was incredibly generous with her time, advice, and enthusiasm for science. I learned a lot from the visit.91ם
And Bellono kept going. 91לTrue to the MBL spirit of trying a bunch of stuff until something works, after visiting Liz, I went to the lab of (former MBL Grass Fellow, now at UPenn) to learn to patch clamp isolated endosomes (a type of organelle),91ם Bellono says. This visit would ultimately lead to their that are critical for eye, hair, and skin pigmentation.
Gaining Technical Prowess
After graduating from Brown in 2015, Bellono pursued postdoctoral training in sensory biology in the lab of at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). There, he began studying electroreceptors, the specialized cells some fish use to detect very small electrical fields for predation, communication, and navigation. And once again, the road of scientific curiosity led back him to the MBL.

91לI was similarly looking to develop a preparation to measure electrical activity from electroreceptors,91ם Bellono says. 91לI had tried several model organisms 91ד glass catfish from the pet store, weakly electric fish, and others91ם when (University of Maryland), now co-director of the MBL Neurobiology course, suggested skates.
Bellono worked with Scott Bennett and the late Dave Remsen of the MBL Marine Resources Center to ship skates to UCSF.
91לWe didn91יt have tanks or anything to keep the animals, so basically I just stayed awake for days doing coffee and beer-powered experiments as long as the cells were healthy,91ם Bellono says. 91לRicardo provided instrumental advice about anatomy and other unfamiliar aspects over the phone while I tried the first cellular dissociations. We later worked with Scott Bennett again, who shipped us catsharks for a comparative study on how skates and sharks differentially tune their receptor cells to detect distinct cues.91ם

Bellono, (former MBL Grass Fellow, now at UCLA), and Julius published their findings in and in Nature.
It was in Julius91י lab that Bellono 91לacquired the skills necessary to take an interesting phenotypic problem and reduce it to one molecule: a single protein,91ם reports an article on Bellono in . 91לBellono has applied this method to understand a variety of intriguing animal behaviors and adaptations.91ם
The Octopus Teachers
When Bellono interviewed for his current position at Harvard, he had become very excited about octopus 91ד especially their arms. 91לIt seems like the arms were doing a lot: sensing and exploring, squeezing into tight places, changing color ...91ם He wondered if 91לan open-minded exploration of signal transduction in the octopus arm would be unique and informative for connecting the evolution of proteins to cellular and organismal function,91ם he told Harvard Magazine. Although he hadn91יt even started working with octopus yet, his enthusiastic 91לchalk talk91ם for his interview outlined this very question. To his surprise, he got the job.

Bellono started from scratch at Harvard, building a makeshift facility to hold octopuses in a former classroom. 91לAfter we flooded our wing of the Biological Laboratories Building a couple of times, had octopuses escape (and rescued), and lab members started bringing additional new animal models, we realized we needed a proper animal facility,91ם he says.
91לWe turned to the MBL and the New England Aquarium for advice about setting up a seawater facility in Cambridge (not exactly typical) and learned that the MBL had recently established a cephalopod facility! That was super exciting because MBL had worked out a tremendous amount in acquiring and housing various cephalopod species and developing experimental tools,91ם he says. 91לAnd they were incredibly generous in providing assistance toward building a community. Special thanks to Bret Grasse, Taylor Sakmar, and Josh Rosenthal, who were incredibly responsive, scientifically engaged, and community oriented.91ם

In 2020, Bellono91יs lab that octopus arms have a specialized 91לtaste by touch91ם sensory system to explore the seafloor, which the use to respond to prey-derived chemicals and movement. And last year, they published studies showing that both octopus and squid use this system of chemotactile receptors to sense their respective marine environments, but structural adaptations allow them to sense specific molecules suited to distinct physiological roles.
Back at the MBL, Joshua Rosenthal91יs lab reported in 2017 that octopus can edit their own RNA, allowing them to diversify the types of proteins they can make. Bellono wonders whether this RNA editing capacity may produce slight structural shifts in their chemotactile receptors, enabling them to sense what they want as they traverse the seafloor.
The Serendipity of Discovery
Since establishing his Harvard lab, Bellono and his lab members regularly visit the MBL to obtain specimens or for longer-duration experiments. 91לAnd, perhaps most true to the MBL spirit, we regularly stumble upon other species and questions during our visit,91ם he says.
For example, during one visit to obtain squid, Scott Bennett introduced them to sea robins, an unusual fish with leg-like appendages. , a postdoctoral scientist from Stanford University, was developing sea robins as a genetically tractable system for evolutionary and developmental study at the MBL. Bellono91יs lab has since been using sea robins to study the evolution of novel traits, in collaboration with Herbert.

Bellono has also returned to lecture in the MBL91יs Neurobiology and Neural Systems & Behavior courses.
91לThis was special to me, since visiting these courses as a college student introduced me to many core concepts that drive our research,91ם he says.
91לI expect we will continue our long-term relationship with the MBL,91ם Bellono affirms. 91לIt91יs the place that inspired my career in science and continues to shape our curiosity-driven style of research and training.91ם