The 2017 Nobel Prize in Chemistry: Cryo-electron microscopy explained

The 2017 Nobel Prize in Chemistry: Cryo-electron microscopy explained



Jacques Dubochet, Joachim Frank, and Richard Henderson have claimed the 2017 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their development of cryo-electron microscopy. ↓↓More info and references below↓↓

This year’s winners surprised many people and stirred up the perennial “is this really chemistry?” debate. But the Nobel committee (and the president of the American Chemical Society, Allison Campbell) believes that cryo-EM’s development is firmly entrenched in the central science. Check out our explainer behind the work that’s enabling researchers to image large biomolecules with atomic precision, ushering in a new era of biochemistry.

And there was at least one person whom this pick did not surprise. Shout out to Gurunath Ramanathan, a viewer of C&EN’s Nobel Prediction Webinar who submitted this guess: “Cryoelectron microscopy is changing the way in biology. My bet is on analytical chemistry.” Watch the full webinar here:

And be sure to check out these references for more on cryo-EM.

Cryo-electron microscopy innovators win 2017 Nobel Prize in Chemistry | C&EN

The first herpes capsid at atomic resolution | C&EN

Uncovering The Spliceosome’s Secrets | C&EN

New close-up views of the nuclear pore complex | C&EN

Cryo-electron tomography provides first view of a cell’s nucleus in its natural, undisturbed environment | C&EN

Bold, Probably Incorrect Predictions of the Future of X-ray Diffraction | C&EN

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2017 | Nobelprize.org

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