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RCSBProteinDataBank | PDB50: Celebrating PDB Contributions from Rutgers | Andrew Nieuwkoop @RCSBProteinDataBank | Uploaded March 2022 | Updated October 2024, 4 days ago.
Solving protein structures with proton detected solid-state NMR: 15 years of progress
Andrew Nieuwkoop
Rutgers School of Arts and Sciences
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Established in 1971, the Protein Data Bank (PDB), an archive of macromolecular structural data that is freely and publicly available to the global community, marked its 50th birthday in 2021. In celebration, a Crash Course titled 'Celebrating PDB Contributions from Rutgers University Structural Biologists' was held virtually on November 2, 2021.

Access all presentations from this meeting at rcsb.org (rcsb.org/pages/pdb50-meetings#rutgers), or use this playlist for chronological recording of the full meeting including panel discussions and introductions (youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHib7JgKNUUfG-jF6Ezr27njjMUoLm5qn).
PDB50: Celebrating PDB Contributions from Rutgers | Andrew NieuwkoopPDB50: Celebrating PDB Contributions from Rutgers | Wei DaiPenicillin Binding Protein: Binding AmpicillinDay 2 | Session 4 | Wah ChiuThe Criminal Case of the Aminoglycoside MisuserTutorial 1 – Getting Started with UCSF ChimeraProtein Data Bank at 50 years of age | Stephen BurleyPDB50 at BPS: Ruth NussinovExploring Computed Structure Models on RCSB.org - IntroductionPython Scripting for Molecular Docking: Manipulating Molecules with RDKitMethods for Determining Atomic Structures: X-ray Crystallography (from PDB-101)Day 2 | Session 3 | Johann Deisenhofer

PDB50: Celebrating PDB Contributions from Rutgers | Andrew Nieuwkoop @RCSBProteinDataBank

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