Vision in the small: Reconstructing the structure of protein macromolecules from Cryo-Electron Micrographs

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperResearchpeer-review

  • Satya Mallick
  • Sameer Agarwal
  • David Kriegman
  • Belongie, Serge
  • Bridget Carragher
  • Clinton Potter

Single particle reconstruction using Cryo-Electron Microscopy (cryo-EM) is an emerging technique in structural biology for estimating the 3-D structure (density) of protein macromolecules. Unlike tomography where a large number of images of a specimen can be acquired, the number of images of an individual particle is limited because of radiation damage. Instead, the specimen consists of identical copies of the same protein macro-molecule embedded in vitreous ice at random and unknown 3-D orientations. Because the images are extremely noisy, thousands to hundreds-of-thousands of projections are needed to achieve the desired resolution of 5Å. Along with differences of the imaging modality compared to photographs, single particle reconstruction provides a unique set of challenges to existing computer vision algorithms. Here, we introduce the challenge and opportunity of reconstruction from transmission electron micrographs, and briefly describe our contributions in areas of particle detection, contrast transfer function (CTF) estimation, and initial 3-D model construction.

Original languageEnglish
Publication date2006
Number of pages6
Publication statusPublished - 2006
Externally publishedYes
Event2006 17th British Machine Vision Conference, BMVC 2006 - Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Duration: 4 Sep 20067 Sep 2006

Conference

Conference2006 17th British Machine Vision Conference, BMVC 2006
CountryUnited Kingdom
CityEdinburgh
Period04/09/200607/09/2006

ID: 302053103