News 2019
Season's Greetings
12/24
Play with Molecular Animations
12/17
Structural Biology and Nobel Prizes
12/09
Molecular Origami: Build a 3D Model of GPCR
12/03
Education Corner: Gaming Structural Biology for General Audiences (Part 2)
11/26
Introducing Mol*
11/19
New Papers on Molecular Visualization
11/12
Education Corner: Gaming Structural Biology for General Audiences (Part 1)
10/29
PDB Turns 48
10/20
Happy Birthday, Irving Geis
10/18
From the Bench to Molecule of the Month
10/15
Fall Newsletter Published
10/08
Structural Biology Pipeline Meets the Classroom: First Structure Released
09/25
Illustrate PDB Structures
09/17
Contact Customer Services with Questions and Feedback
09/10
Head Back to School with PDB-101
09/03
Poster Prize Awarded at ISMB
08/27
Poster Prize Awarded at ACA
08/20
Join Our Biocuration Team
08/06
Education Corner: How Does Life Work?
07/23
Beginner’s Guide to PDB Structures and the PDBx/mmCIF Format
07/16
Summer Newsletter Published
07/09
Create a Hemoglobin Bean Bag Toss
07/02
Learn About HIV and AIDS at PDB-101
06/25
New Flyer: Antibiotics in Action
06/04
Annual Report Published
05/21
Award-Winning Videos on Antibiotic Resistance
05/14
Education Corner: Exploring the Molecules of Biological Warfare in Virtual Reality
05/07
Vote Now for the Viewer's Choice Award
04/30
Celebrate DNA Day on April 25
04/23
Spring Newsletter Published
04/16
Take the Molecule of the Month User Survey and Enter to Win
04/09
High School Students: Submit Antibiotic Resistance Videos Before April 23
04/02
Molecular Landscapes and the Art of Science
03/26
The PDB Archive Reaches a Significant Milestone
03/19
New Video: Penicillin and Antibiotic Resistance
03/05
Superbugs! How Bacteria Evolve Resistance to Antibiotics
02/26
Join Our Team as a Biocurator
02/12
New Online Curriculum: The PDB Pipeline & Data Archiving
02/05
Education Corner: Improving Visual Literacy
01/29
Winter Newsletter Published
01/15
2018 FASEB BioArt Winner
01/08
2019: What is a protein?
01/01

Structural Biology Pipeline Meets the Classroom: First Structure Released

09/25 

Last Fall, the RCSB PDB Newsletter highlighted Structural Biology Pipeline Meets the High School Classroom. For this feature, Biology Teacher Dan Williams coordinated articles from the point of view of students and of teachers from Long Island, NY involved in SPARK (Students Partnerships for Advance Research and Knowledge), a collaborative program by the Office of Educational Programs and NSLS-II at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL).

With this week’s update of the PDB, the first structure from this program, a methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) was made publicly available as PDB entry 6PEY.

Shelter Island students Emma Gallagher and Lauren Gurney worked in collaboration with students from across Long Island to perform hundreds of crystallization reactions, freeze the MTHFR crystals in liquid nitrogen, and obtain X-ray diffraction data using the AMX beamline at Brookhaven National Laboratory’s National Synchrotron Light Source II. Countless hours were spent analyzing the data using standard structural biology programs such as CCP4 and COOT.

MTHFR has been implicated in many human diseases including but not limited to cardiovascular disease and miscarriage. It is hoped that further examination of this structure will help scientists, like these students, understand how MTHFR works and lead to better treatments.

Thanks to the SPARK program, high school students like Emma and Lauren and hundreds of other Long Islanders have joined the worldwide PDB Data Depositors community. Soon, other PDB structures from this program will be released. By working together, all of the students in the SPARK program have helped make each other to be better scientists.

This achievement was made possible by the continuous guidance and support of the scientists in BNL’s SPARK program and Office of Educational Programs, Dr. Aleida Perez, Dr. Alexei Soares, and Dr. Vivian Stojanoff.

For more, see Structural Biology Pipeline Meets the High School Classroom.

RCSB PDB News ImageMural at Shelter Island High School inspired by the SPARK program and the RCSB PDB-ACA Coloring Book.


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