SLAC topics

Cryo-EM RSS feed

Cryo-EM allows scientists to make detailed 3D images of DNA, RNA, proteins, viruses, cells and the tiny molecular machines within the cell, revealing how they change shape and interact in complex ways while carrying out life’s functions.

Related links:   
Joint institutes and centers  
Cryo-EM fact sheet (pdf) 
Stanford-SLAC Cryo-Electron Microscopy website

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Research associate Megan Mayer and graduate student Patrick Mitchell load a sample into a cryogenic electron microscope at SLAC.
News Brief

For the first time, scientists have revealed the steps needed to turn on a receptor that helps regulate neuron firing. The findings might help...

yellow and blue protein structures.
Feature

Researchers expect the new method to answer fundamental questions in biology and materials science. First up: Images showing molecules that help guide cell division...

cryo-EM image of Caulobacter bacterium
Video
Cornelius Gati and other researchers were studying a protein thought to be important for the progression of tuberculosis when they made a strange discovery...
Tuberculosis Protein New Discovery 2020 // Cornelius GATI
Video
Feature

The lab is responding to the coronavirus crisis by imaging disease-related biomolecules, developing standards for reliable coronavirus testing and enabling other essential research.

SARS-CoV-2
News Release

The giant cavity, in a protein that transports nutrients across the cell membrane, is unlike anything researchers have seen before.

A scientist working overlaid on a world map and images of tuberculosis bacteria.
News Brief

Cryogenic electron microscopy can in principle make out individual atoms in a molecule, but distinguishing the crisp from the blurry parts of an image...

An overall image of the apoferritin molecule (left) and a small section (right)
News Brief

A new understanding of the nucleation process could shed light on how the shells help microbes interact with their environments, and help people design...

Illustration of tiles forming a microbial shell
News Release

A new twist on cryo-EM imaging reveals what’s going on inside MOFs, highly porous nanoparticles with big potential for storing fuel, separating gases and...

Images of cryo-EM equipment, CO2 molecule in cage
Feature

Stanford virologists are working with scientists at the new Stanford-SLAC Cryo-Electron Microscopy facility to take a new look at how herpesviruses infect cells.

Past Event

Presented by Wah Chiu. Cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) is a revolutionary technology for making 3D images of the inner workings of cells in much...

stillframe for public lecture
Video

Public lecture presented by Wah Chiu

stillframe for public lecture
Video
Public Lecture Poster
Public Lecture poster titled Cryo-EM: Amazing 3D Views of Life’s Molecular Machines