News 2017
Season's Greetings
12/26
Access Irving Geis' Early Molecular Images in 3D
12/19
Browse the Biology of Plants and More at PDB-101
12/12
Structural Databases as Teaching Tools
11/28
New Video Answers "What is a Protein?"
11/21
Postdocs and Developers: Join Our Team
11/14
Highlighting Structural Biology
11/07
PDB Trends: Expanding Boundaries of Complexity with 3DEM
10/31
Color the Diverse 3D Shapes Studied by Crystallographers
10/24
Fall Newsletter Published
10/10
User Survey: Tell RCSB PDB About Your Interests
10/01
Get Excited, Be Critical
09/26
Donate Today to Support the PDB's Spirit of Openness, Cooperation and Education
09/19
Head Back to School with PDB-101
09/12
Poster Prize Awarded at ISMB
08/15
Torres Takes Poster Prize for a Second Time at ACA
08/08
Summer Newsletter Published
07/25
Annual Report Published
07/18
New Video: How Enzymes Work
06/26
Guide to Understanding PDB Data: Small Molecules
06/20
Award-Winning Structural Biology/Diabetes Videos
06/13
Vote Now for the Video Viewer's Choice Award
05/30
Learning Structural Biology in Virtual Reality
05/09
Spring Newsletter Published
04/11
Zika Illustration Named People’s Choice
04/04
See the Art of Science at Rutgers' S.T.E.A.M. Women's Empowerment Conference on March 25
03/23
PDB-101 is "Best of the Web"
03/21
Enter the 2017 Video Challenge
02/21
Molecular Origami: Build 3D models of Zika virus
01/31
Winter Newsletter Published
01/10
2016 FASEB BioArt Winner
01/03

PDB Trends: Expanding Boundaries of Complexity with 3DEM

10/31 

3D electron microscopy (3DEM) is revolutionizing the field of structural biology. Atomic structures of biomolecules are now being determined by 3DEM, due to recent advances in several key technologies, including methods for sample preservation, vastly improved microscopy optics and detectors, and novel methods for structure solution with advanced computing. Researchers are also taking an integrative approach, determining atomic structures of subunits with X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy, then using them to build a large assembly based on data from 3DEM. 3DEM is proving to be a perfect complement to X-ray and NMR techniques, since 3DEM is most effective on large, complex assemblies, which are typically difficult to study by other methods, and does not require large quantities of material, homogeneous samples, or crystallization.

Structures from 3DEM are made publicly available in the PDB archive to help further scientific research and education. The PDB released its first 3DEM entry in 1991, the ground-breaking structure of bacteriorhodopsin. Since then, more than 1700 3DEM structures have been made available in the PDB archive, with more than 1000 released from 2015-2017.

A new flyer highlights Nobel Prize-winning research in cryo-electron microscopy and other PDB structures determined using 3DEM. Download the PDF or explore the structures at PDB-101.

RCSB PDB News Image
RCSB PDB News Image


Past news and events have been reported at the RCSB PDB website and past Newsletters.