Stanford-Berkeley Summer School 2002:
Synchrotron Radiation and its Applications in Physical Sciences and Life Sciences
July 7-12, 2002
Stanford University
Table of Contents
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Summary
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Joint Sessions
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Life Sciences Program
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Lecture Materials
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List of Participants
The Stanford-Berkeley Summer Schools are jointly organized by Stanford University,
University of California Berkeley, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and the
Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory. The Summer School series provides lecture
programs on synchrotron radiation and its broad range of scientific applications in the
Physical and Life Sciences. The goal of the school is to disseminate information about
scientific opportunities in synchrotron radiation applications and train students on
experimental techniques. It provides an interdisciplinary and intellectually stimulating
environment for new and experienced researchers. Interaction between lecturers and
students is stimulated through dedicated problem solving sessions and round table
discussions.
The Summer Schools 2002 attracted 68 students from various parts of the world. This
year's program in the Life Sciences focused on structure determination methods in
macromolecular crystallography from crystal screening to structure interpretation with
special emphasis on computational methods. The Physical Sciences program provided
a comprehensive overview of the synchrotron radiation process and its applications
related to spectroscopy and diffraction. Particular emphasis was given to examples
from physics, chemistry, and material science.
The program started with a joint session on Monday morning that
emphasized synchrotron radiation generation, interaction of synchrotron radiation with
matter and the details of insertion devices and beam lines with a focus on new
technologies. The speakers for this session were Dave Attwood (UC Berkeley), Anders
Nilsson (Stanford Univ.), and Peter Kuhn (Stanford Univ.). These lectures provided an
overall picture of synchrotron radiation and its future role. Friday's joint session started
with a lecture by Helmut Wiedemann on "Electron accelerators as synchrotron radiation
sources". This was followed by a tour of SSRL's storage ring, the macromolecular
crystallography, material science, and x-ray diffraction beam lines. Participants had the
opportunity to take a close look at one of SSRL's sample changing systems, which was
in production at the macromolecular crystallography beamline 11-1. Afternoon lectures
by Douglas Rees (California Institute of Technology) on "Crystallography at the cutting
edge", Jim Wells (Sunesis Pharmaceuticals) on "Drug development", and Joachim Stohr
(Stanford University) on "Industrial applications of synchrotron
radiation" gave an
exciting overview of the importance and opportunities of synchrotron radiation in applied
research.
A total of 40 students enrolled for the Life Sciences program.
Thirty-two students were from the US, six from Canada, one from Singapore, and one
from Taiwan. Programs provided a very stimulating environment leading to good
interactions between students and speakers. There were also special sessions
encouraging students to present their problems for discussion. Thirteen of the lecturers
were from the US, two from the UK, and one from Germany. Details of the program and
background on the speakers can be found on the web. A satellite workshop on
"Integrated Software for Structural Genomics and High-Throughput Structural
Biology"
was held on Tuesday and Wednesday evening and included presentations and
discussions concerning crystallographic software automation, beam line automation,
and related software development issues. A follow-up brainstorming session on
Wednesday evening gathered ideas from students and speakers on future automation
requirements. A more detailed description of the program can be accessed from the
main program website.
The Monday afternoon session started with a lecture on "Crystallography
understanding the baseline" by Tom Alber. This was followed by a lecture by Elspeth
Garman on "Diffraction theory and space groups". The evening session was devoted to
student problems. Students were encouraged to present issues related to their current
research. During the discussions following each presentation all participants shared
experiences and suggested various ways to solve the problems.
Principles of data reduction, phasing, refinement, and model validation were discussed
during the Tuesday morning session. These lectures were followed by tutorial-cum-lecture
sessions on diffraction data assessment, heavy atom substructure and
alternative derivatives. Speakers for these sessions were Andrew Leslie, Axel Brunger,
Elspeth Garman, Ana Gonzalez, Thomas Schneider, and Paul Ellis.
The Wednesday sessions started with lectures on high throughput structural biology
and practical aspects of data reduction by Ashley Deacon and Andrew Leslie,
respectively. This was followed by tutorial-cum-lecture sessions by Thomas Schneider,
Andrew Leslie and Leslie Tari on practical aspects of solving heavy atom substructures,
phase improvement, and problems in model building and fitting. Paul Adams gave a
detailed lecture on the principles and other issues related to the automation of
refinement.
School
Directors
Life Sciences: |
Peter
Kuhn, Stanford University/SSRL, pkuhn@slac.stanford.edu |
John
Kuriyan, University of California, Berkeley/ALS, kuriyan@uclink.berkeley.edu |
|
Physical
Sciences: |
Dave
Attwood, University of California, Berkeley/ALS, attwood@eecs.berkeley.edu |
Anders
Nilsson, Stanford University/SSRL, nilsson@ssrl.slac.stanford.edu |
Local Co-Chair:
Irimpan Mathews- Stanford/SSRL, iimathew@slac.stanford.edu
Local Organizing Committee:
Amanda Prado
Thomas Eriksson
Lisa Dunn
Ann Mueller
|
|
Paul Adams |
PDAdams@lbl.gov |
LBL & Berkeley |
Tom Alber |
tom@ucxray6.berkeley.edu |
UC Berkeley |
Dave Attwood |
dtattwood@lbl.gov |
UC Berkeley
and LBNL |
Sean Brennan |
bren@ssrl.slac.stanford.edu |
SSRL |
Gordon Brown |
gordon@pangea.stanford.edu |
Stanford |
Axel Brunger |
axel.brunger@stanford.edu |
Stanford |
Ashley Deacon |
adeacon@slac.stanford.edu |
Stanford |
Paul Ellis |
ellis@slac.stanford.edu |
Stanford |
Charles
Fadley |
fadley@lbl.gov |
UC Davis
and LBNL |
Elspeth
Garman |
elspeth@biop.ox.ac.uk |
Oxford University |
Graham George |
ggeorge@slac.stanford.edu |
SSRL |
Ana Gonzalez |
ana@slac.stanford.edu |
Stanford |
Jerry Hastings |
jbh@slac.stanford.edu |
SSRL |
Charles
Kissinger |
crk@stromix.com |
Structural
Genomics |
Andrew Leslie |
andrew@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk |
MRC Cambridge |
Irimpan
Mathews |
iimathew@slac.stanford.edu |
Stanford |
Tim McPhillips |
tim@slac.stanford.edu |
Stanford |
Duncan McRee |
dmcree@syrrx.com |
Syrrx |
Anders Nilsson |
nilsson@slac.stanford.edu |
SSRL & Stockholm University |
Anastassis
Perrakis |
perrakis@nki.nl |
NKI Amsterdam |
Doug Rees |
dcrees@caltech.edu |
Caltech |
Andrej Sali |
sali@rockefeller.edu |
Rockefeller
University |
Thomas Schneider |
trs@shelx.uni-ac.gwdg.de |
Univ. of
Göttingen |
Z.-X. Shen |
shen@ssrl.slac.stanford.edu |
Stanford |
Neville
Smith |
nvsmith@lbl.gov |
LBNL |
Jo Stöhr |
stohr@ssrl.slac.stanford.edu |
SSRL & Stanford University |
Leslie Tari |
leslie.tari@syrrx.com |
Syrrx |
Frank von
Delft |
|
Syrrx |
Tony Warwick |
t_warwick@lbl.gov |
LBNL |
Jim Wells |
jaw@sunesis.com |
Sunesis |
Helmut Wiedemann |
wiedemann@ssrl.slac.stanford.edu |
SSRL |
|