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cryoDuck Hottest Social in SBDD (01/2025)

Written by Mazdak Radjainia | Jan 19, 2025 6:14:06 PM

Cryo-EM Twitter used to be an incredible place - a scientific hub chipping away at many of academia’s longstanding barriers. Suddenly, knowledge flowed at the speed of science, no longer tethered to glacial publication cycles or oversubscribed conference schedules. Younger scientists, normally buried in the back of lecture halls, could share their breakthroughs directly with global leaders. Peer mentoring flourished, careers took off, and researchers found a stage to showcase not just their data, but their authentic selves.

Perhaps the best part of Twitter was watching siloed sub-communities collide in real time - medical Twitter, biotech Twitter, chemistry Twitter, physics Twitter - coming together in ways the Ivory Tower rarely encourages. It was chaotic at times, sure, but it also broke down walls and sparked new ideas.

Then came Elon and the place practically went up in flames overnight. The issue with Elon runs deeper than mere politics; it’s a clash of cultures. As Nate Silver aptly pointed out , his Twitter acquisition magnified the divide between academia’s ethos and the “tech-bro” mindset that already existed:


Disillusioned scientists (including many from cryo-EM Twitter) finally had enough and migrated to BlueSky, where conversations are slowly taking shape. Meanwhile, biotech Twitter is still holding on to X (formerly Twitter), leaving the rest of us toggling between multiple platforms - because apparently one social media feed just wasn’t exhausting enough.

Let’s face it: Who has the time to constantly monitor X, BlueSky, LinkedIn, and maybe even Mastodon (if you’re really committed) to avoid missing major research news or the occasional meltdown? That’s why cryoDuck is stepping in with a new monthly series, “The Hottest Social in SBDD,” launching in 2025. We’ll sift through the noise to bring you the most compelling posts, insights, and breakthroughs across platforms, saving you from a never-ending cycle of app-hopping.

And we’re off to a big start. January’s buzz alone included spectacular cryo-EM structures that captured how HIV capsids don't stop at nuclear pores instead breaking them, a revolutionary breakthrough in protein purification via microfluidics, eye-popping new stats from the Protein Data Bank, and some spirited debates on industry resilience and investment trends. If this is how 2025 begins, it’s safe to say we have a very interesting year ahead. Strap in, and let cryoDuck keep you on top of what matters—no matter which social media kingdom claims your attention this week.

Target structures and wonderful proteins

Tell me again that structural biologists are near extinction because of AI. We are just getting started! 💪🏾

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— Chrystal Starbird (@drstarbird.bsky.social) January 18, 2025 at 4:09 PM

Cryo-EM workflow, methods and discovery technologies

🔬 Tired of dropping CryoEM grids during manipulation? Check out my 3D-printed holder! Download the STL file here: www.printables.com/model/900940.... Compatible with glow discharge systems, it makes your workflow smoother and more efficient. 💡 #CryoEM #3DPrinting #OpenScience

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— Louis Rouillan (@lrouillan.bsky.social) January 14, 2025 at 4:06 PM

For structures determined by cryo-electron microscopy, 2024 was yet again the year of the Gatan Microscopy, with a 'GATAN K3' detector used in ~4000 entries. ~700 entries used a GATAN K2 detector, while FEI Falcon detectors (@thermofishersci.bsky.social) accounted for ~800 entries. 6/11

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— Protein Data Bank in Europe (PDBe) (@pdbeurope.bsky.social) January 13, 2025 at 10:43 AM

This is a fantastic integration of alphafold and fiducial markers applied to small transporter structure determination with #cryoEM. Congrats to @danengw.bsky.social, Nathaniel Traaseth and team. www.nature.com/articles/s41...

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— Ed Twomey (@cryoet.bsky.social) January 15, 2025 at 8:26 PM

Protein production for cryoEM structure determination just got a lot cheaper - high resolution structure from half a plate of HEK cells with the "MIcro ISolation (MISO)" microfluidics-based approach. Congrats to the Brunner and Efremov labs in Brussels! www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...

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— Lander Lab (@landerlab.bsky.social) January 16, 2025 at 11:57 PM

KOLs, thoughts and reflections

We just might be computing our way to better snakebite antivenoms. But there's a lot that remains to be done, and who will pay to do it?

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— Derek Lowe (@dereklowe.bsky.social) January 16, 2025 at 9:46 PM

"I'm kind of an AI skeptic, because I find that the machine learned something, but I didn't." - David DeRosier (paraphrase), at the "Cryo-EM: the next 50 years" symposium.

— Benjamin Bammes (@bbammes.bsky.social) January 11, 2025 at 11:48 PM

You want to build an apparatus for time-resolved cryo-EM? Easy: bio-protocol.org/en/bpdetail?...

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— Joachim Frank (@joachim123.bsky.social) January 16, 2025 at 11:23 PM

 

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