News 2026
PDB-101 Focus: Biotechnology
03/25
March 24 is World TB Day
03/22
Register for the April 23 Open Discussion–Deposition, Validation, and Biocuration
03/22
Use the AI-Powered 3D Structure Similarity Search
03/20
Take the RCSB PDB Survey and Win
03/18
Register for PDB Workshops at IUCr2026
03/16
March 16-22: Brain Awareness Week
03/15
Remembering Philip E. Bourne
03/11
Poster Prize Awarded at The Biophysical Society Meeting
03/10
Watch the Exploring CSMs at RCSB.org Office Hour
03/09
Register for the April 30 CodeBMB Webinar for Beginners
03/05
PDB Reaches a New Milestone
03/05
Meet RCSB PDB at ASBMB
03/04
Join Our Team as a Biocurator
03/03
March 4 is International HPV Awareness Day
03/03
Take the PDB-101 User Survey and Win
02/26
Register for the March 26 Webinar on the New PDB Beta Archive
02/26
Register for the March 18 Virtual Office Hour on Biological Assemblies
02/23
Education Corner: BioStinE
02/22
Take the PDB-101 User Survey and Win
02/17
PDB-101 Focus: Biotechnology
02/15
Molecular Valentines
02/10
How Structural Biologists and the PDB Drive Innovation
02/04
February 4 is World Cancer Day
02/01
Register for the February 26 Webinar on Chemical Search
01/28
Impact of PDB Structures on Anti-Cancer Drug Approvals
01/27
Register for the February 19 Virtual Office Hour on PDB-101
01/26
January is Cervical Cancer Awareness Month
01/20
Winter Newsletter Published
01/15
Register for the January 26 Webinar on Advanced Search
01/12
Top Molecules of the Month in 2025
01/12
Register for PDB Workshops at IUCr2026
01/11
Register for the January 22 Virtual Office Hour on Extended PDB IDs and the Beta PDB Archive
01/08
PDB-101 Focus in 2026: Biotechnology
01/06
Learn to Use Mol* for 3D Visualization
01/06

March 24 is World TB Day

03/22 

The discovery of streptomycin in 1944 provided the first effective treatment for tuberculosis. Ever since then, we have fought an escalating battle with bacteria using streptomycin and other aminoglycoside antibiotics. Researchers have discovered many natural aminoglycosides made by bacteria, and chemists have created entirely new antibiotics based on these effective natural defenses. In turn, bacteria have developed many different ways to protect themselves from attack by these antibiotics. These include molecular methods to control the entry of the drug into cells, pumps to eject drugs out of the cell, and enzymes that directly modify both the target of the drug and the drug itself.

Visit PDB-101 to learn more about Aminoglycoside Antibiotics, Aminoglycoside Antibiotics and Resistance, and Antimicrobial Resistance.

Visit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for more TB day resources.

<I>Small subunit of a bacterial ribosome with paromomycin (red), streptomycin (not visible in the figure), and spectinomycin (orange). A small piece of the messenger RNA is shown in green.</I>Small subunit of a bacterial ribosome with paromomycin (red), streptomycin (not visible in the figure), and spectinomycin (orange). A small piece of the messenger RNA is shown in green.


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