Structural Biology at the ESRF:
Past, Present & Future

Programme

 

Tuesday 4th February 2014

“Life after ID14: The Current Status of Facilities for Structural Biology at the ESRF”

IBS Seminar Room

Session I chaired by Gordon Leonard

14:00-14:10

Introduction

Gordon Leonard
ESRF Grenoble, France

14:10-14:35

UPBL10 = BM29 + MASSIF + ID30B

Christoph Mueller-Dieckmann
ESRF Grenoble, France

14:35-15:00

MASSIF, an automated beamline based on a RoboDiff

Didier Nurizzo
ESRF Grenoble, France

15:00-15:25

BioSAXS at the ESRF

Adam Round
EMBL Grenoble, France

Session II chaired by Christoph Mueller-Dieckmann

15:55-16:15

Plans for ID29, ID23-1 & ID23-2

Gordon Leonard
ESRF Grenoble, France

16:15-16:35

MxCuBE2 at the crossroad between automation and better crystallography

Daniele de Sanctis
ESRF Grenoble, France

16:35-16:55

Workflows for Structural Biology experiments

Olof Svensson
ESRF Grenoble, France

16:55-17:15

Automatic data processing and structure solution

Max Nanao
EMBL Grenoble, France

17:15-17:35

ISPYB: the structural biologist's experiment companion

Stéphanie Monaco
ESRF Grenoble, France

17:35-18:00

Discussion

 

 

Wednesday 5th February 2014

“Life after Phase II: Synchrotron Serial Crystallography?"

IBS Seminar Room

Session I chaired by Daniele de Sanctis

14:00-14:30

Serial crystallography - Recent results, challenges and prospects

Ilme Schlichting
Max Planck Institute for Medical Research Heidelberg, Germany

14:30-15:00

3-D Data Collection strategy accounting radiation damage

Alexander Popov
ESRF Grenoble, France

15:00-15:30

What could we do using serial crystallography at a synchrotron?

Gleb Bourenkov
Petra-III DESY Hamburg, Germany

15:30-16:00

‘Hit and run’ serial femtosecond crystallography of membrane proteins using the lipidic cubic mesophase

Martin Caffrey
Trinity College Dublin, Ireland

Session II chaired by Antoine Royant

16:30-17:00

Serial femtosecond crystallography of a photosynthetic reaction centre

Gergely Katona
University of Gothenburg, Sweden

17:00-17:30

The benefit of room temperature data collection for studying protein dynamics

Martin Weik
IBS Grenoble, France

17:30-18:00

Discussion