/Lurk mode off

Not to steal any of the thunder from James, but I would also point out that 
those interested in the discussion are the perfect attendees for the Gordon 
Research Conference next year - July 26th to 31st with a Gordon Research 
Seminar for your students and postdocs - July 25th-26th - save the date and 
consider attending. In my opinion, this is one of the best meetings in this 
subject area.

Also, from past experience, it would be really great if any vendors or other 
organizations seeing this chain of emails would consider putting the Conference 
or Seminar on their list for support in 2020. It really helps bring in great 
speakers, start many new collaborations, and grow the field.

Best,

Eddie

/Lurk mode on

Edward Snell Ph.D.

Biological Small Angle Scattering Theory and Practice, Eaton E. Lattman, Thomas 
D. Grant, and Edward H. Snell. 
Available through all good bookshops, or direct from Oxford University Press  

Director of the NSF BioXFEL Science and Technology Center
President and CEO Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research Institute
BioInnovations Chaired Professorship, University at Buffalo, SUNY
700 Ellicott Street, Buffalo, NY 14203-1102
hwi.buffalo.edu
Phone:       (716) 898 8631         Fax: (716) 898 8660 
Skype:        eddie.snell                 Email: [email protected]  
Webpage: https://hwi.buffalo.edu/scientist-directory/snell/

Heisenberg was probably here!


-----Original Message-----
From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Holton, 
James M
Sent: Monday, July 15, 2019 3:44 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ccp4bb] challenges in structural biology

Hello folks,

I have the distinct honor of chairing the next Gordon Research Conference on 
Diffraction Methods in Structural Biology (July 26-31 2020).  This meeting will 
focus on the biggest challenges currently faced by structural biologists, and I 
mean actual real-world challenges.  As much as possible, these challenges will 
take the form of friendly competitions with defined parameters, data, a scoring 
system, and "winners", to be established along with other unpublished results 
only at the meeting, as is tradition at GRCs.

But what are the principle challenges in biological structure determination 
today?  I of course have my own ideas, but I feel like I'm forgetting 
something.  Obvious choices are:
1) getting crystals to diffract better
2) building models into low-resolution maps (after failing at #1)
3) telling if a ligand is really there or not
4) the phase problem (dealing with weak signal, twinning and
pseudotranslation)
5) what does "resolution" really mean?
6) why are macromolecular R factors so much higher than small-molecule ones?
7) what is the best way to process serial crystallography data?
8) how should one deal with non-isomorphism in multi-crystal methods?
9) what is the "structure" of something that won't sit still?

What am I missing?  Is industry facing different problems than academics?  Are 
there specific challenges facing electron-based techniques?  If so, could the 
combined strength of all the world's methods developers solve them?  I'm 
interested in hearing the voice of this community.  On or off-list is fine.

-James Holton
MAD Scientist


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