Barbar’s journey — from a young girl navigating a war-torn country to leading a university department — is a testament to the power of resilience and curiosity.
Barbar grew up in Beirut, Lebanon, in a family that prioritized science and mathematics. Though her initial pursuit of science was driven by aptitude rather than passion, she eventually found her calling. Her journey into biochemistry began in Lebanon, where she earned her undergraduate degree in chemistry at the American University of Beirut amid civil unrest.
A pivotal moment came when conflict in her homeland disrupted her academic opportunities. During this time, tragedy struck her family when her grandfather was killed by shrapnel during the Lebanese Civil War. This devastating loss, coupled with the ongoing violence, motivated her to move to the United States to continue her education.
It was during her postdoctoral work that Barbar fell in love with proteins. “I found a sense of belonging,” she says, describing the thrill of observing protein structures at the atomic level. “I was itching to see what comes next.”
Prior to the late 1980s and early 1990s, the scientific community thought of unfolded proteins as an anomaly – something that only happened in a lab. In the early 2000’s around the same time Barbar was starting her first laboratory, the discovery came that some proteins never fold, and they were meant to stay that way. This opened a tsunami of questions: If they don’t have a structure, what do they do and why?
“In the old days, if proteins were unfolded, you just threw them away because ‘what can I do with them?’ Because structure determines function, that was the old way of thinking,” Barbar said. “I was at the beginning of all of this and it was a beautiful time because I spent my postdoc years developing methods to work on partially disordered proteins and therefore had the skills to jump into this field.”
Intrinsically disordered proteins (IDPs), as they would come to be known, are a subset of proteins that, unlike traditional proteins, do not fold into a stable three-dimensional structure. Instead, they remain flexible and dynamic, enabling them to perform unique functions within cells. This lack of structure allows IDPs to act as molecular switches, regulators and adaptors, playing critical roles in processes like cell signaling, gene regulation and protein assembly.
“Nobody thought they were important. But then from our work, we showed that those other pieces that we thought were disposable, those are what tell the protein how to do what we call regulation,” she said.
Regulation is like a light switch. For example, if you have a protein that has a tail, that tail can cover its active site, preventing it from functioning. When the right signal comes along, the tail moves, activating the protein.
Her research demonstrates that their flexibility is not a limitation but an advantage — allowing IDPs to interact with multiple partners and regulate complex cellular systems with precision.
A protein with a rigid shape has a fixed number of binding sites, while IDPs are open and flexible, meaning they offer more binding opportunities.