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Philanthropic support accelerates infrastructure for the future of structural biology

A new $5 million initiative, funded by the Astera Institute, aims to make diffuse scattering 鈥 a signal in X-ray crystallography that reveals protein dynamics 鈥 accessible to the public and the broader scientific community. The Cornell participants include chemists and Steve Meisburger. Experimental work will be conducted at the (CHESS). 

The goal of is to make data collection possible at any crystallography beamline, using software that anyone can use, and to build infrastructure for sharing models of protein dynamics. The work ultimately aims to accelerate AI-driven modeling of how proteins move, which the researchers said could be a step towards understanding protein functions and how they may be better engineered or manipulated.

The team members hope to involve more of the scientific community in the future of structural biology, 鈥渨here we not only determine how proteins move experimentally but also move beyond static structure prediction to predicting molecular motions,鈥 said Ando, professor of chemistry and chemical biology in the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频.

The Diffuse Project builds on research from the and CHESS and analyzing protein crystals. For the project the Ando Lab will collect high-quality datasets for the public and create data processing and visualization tools. 

鈥淚鈥檓 super excited that after ten years of working as an individual lab to understand this complex signal from protein crystals, we now have the support and partnership of the Astera Institute to collaborate with a consortium of scientists,鈥 Ando said. 鈥淭ogether, we can bring this technique to the public and accelerate new discoveries.鈥

Meisburger will work with CHESS to develop the experimental infrastructure and with Astera Institute software developers to produce the next-generation version of the software he originally developed for the earlier studies.

鈥淲e鈥檝e shown that diffuse scattering data contains the information we want, but it comes with unruly data and modeling challenges,鈥 said Meisburger, research associate in chemistry and chemical biology (A&S). 鈥淭he initiative from Astera is such a unique opportunity because it assembles the right team to tackle these challenges head on. For me, the most exciting aspect is getting to work with and learn from this group, including professional software developers and open science leaders, to create something of lasting public value.鈥

Other participants in Astera鈥檚 Diffuse team include researchers at the University of California, San Francisco; Vanderbilt University; the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; and Los Alamos National Laboratory.

Linda B. Glaser is news and media relations manager for the 麻豆视频 & 麻豆视频.

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Several people standing in rows between two red columns in front of a building
Provided Members of the project team that gathered at Astera Institute on June 24, 2025. Nozomi Ando is front row, second from the right; Stephen Meisburger is back row, third from the left.