25. Hermann Staudinger Lecture with Nobel Laureate Joachim Frank

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Visualization of Biomolecules in their Native States

On July 2, 2018 at 5:15 pm the 25th Hermann Staudinger Lecture was held by Joachim Frank (Columbia University, New York, USA) in the Anatomy Lecture Hall, Albertstr. 19. Joachim Frank was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2017 together with Jacques Dubochet and Richard Henderson for developing cryo-electron microscopy for the high-resolution structure determination of biomolecules in solution. In the study of biomaterials, conventional electron microscopy for a long time was deemed not applicable as the high electron radiation destroys biological materials.
Applying mathematical and information technology methods, Joachim Frank already between 1975 and 1986 developed an image processing method to analyze fuzzy two-dimensional electron microscope images of biomolecules and to merge them into clear three-dimensional images of their molecular structure. The visualization of biomolecules has since revolutionized biochemistry und has broadened considerably the potential of electron technology in the study of living material. Visualizing, for instance, proteins that cause antibiotic resistance as well as mapping the surface of the Zika virus was made possible through this new technology.
In his lecture, the Freiburg Alumnus who studied Physics at the Albert-Ludwigs-University from 1960 to 1963 will speak on the significance of this new technology and implications for future research in e.g. molecular medicine.

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