The 19th West Coast Protein Crystallography Workshop
The 19th West Coast Protein Crystallography Workshop

ABOUT THE WCPCW
The West Coast Protein Crystallography Workshop (WCPCW), a biennial event, has grown in prominence and attendance since its inception about 40 years ago. It has become a pre-eminent venue for the presentation of useful structure information and developing techniques in the field of macromolecular crystallography.

The 250+ conferees include graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, senior faculty, and delegates from West Coast laboratories. Increasingly, crystallographers from other regions, both domestic and foreign, have participated as well. This Conference preserves its workshop character allowing for the productive interaction of all the participants.

A notable feature of the WCPCW is a schedule dominated with oral presentations by students, postdocs, and those who have been closely associated with the execution of the research presented. This allows for an impressive array of talks on exciting topics by rising stars. We anticipate an exciting schedule featuring outstanding science coupled with a unique collaborating opportunity for all members of the crystallographer community.



KEYNOTE SPEAKERS
Brian W. Matthews is a Professor of Physics at the University of Oregon. He was born in Melbourne, Australia and received his graduate training in small molecule crystallography at the University of Adelaide. He did postdoctoral research in protein crystallography with David Blow at the MRC-LMB in Cambridge, England, where he worked on the structure of α-chymotrypsin and protein phase determination, and later at the National Institutes of Health with David Davies, where he worked on the γ-chymotrypsin isoform structure and antibodies. In 1969, he opened his laboratory at the University of Oregon in Eugene where he has been a Professor of Physics and a founding member of the Institute of Molecular Biology. During the 1970s and early 1980s, his lab solved many new structures, thermolysin protease, λ-cro repressor, T4 lysozyme and bacterial chlorophyll, to name a few. In the early 1980s, Brian’s lab began probing structure-stability relationships in T4 lysozyme, which became a signature work for the group. In addition, numerous other publications on wide variety of topics have emanated from the lab: DNA-binding proteins and enzymes, aminopeptidases, glycosidases, occupancy of internal cavities, structural effects of cryo-cooling and so forth. He has been the recipient of numerous grants, awards and honors throughout his research career, with well over 300 publications, and more than 500 structures in the PDB. From 1990 until his retirement from research in summer 2008, Brian was a Howard Hughes Investigator. He is also a member of the National Academy of Sciences and past president of the Protein Society. He continues to be active in the crystallographic community, and is an ex-officio officer for the Protein Society and Editor-in-Chief of Protein Science.

Florante A. Quiocho is the Charles C. Bell Professor of Structural Biology and Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the Baylor College of Medicine. He was born in the Philippines. He received his Ph.D. degree in Biochemistry from Yale University, where he worked with Frederic M. Richards in obtaining pivotal evidence for the catalytic activities of enzymes in the crystalline state. Following a postdoctoral appointment at Harvard University, conducting research in protein crystallography with William N. Lipscomb, Dr. Quiocho joined the faculty of the Department of Biochemistry at Rice University until moving on to Baylor where he also held a HHMI Investigator appointment for 18 years. Dr. Quiocho has been the recipient of fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and EMBO. His research interests center on the relationship of the three-dimensional structures and functions of several proteins. These studies have yielded new insights into understanding of molecular recognitions of ions by ion-dipole interactions, carbohydrates by aromatic residue stacking and capped RNA by cation-Ï€ interaction, calmodulin-regulated signal transduction processes, ABC-type active transport and enzyme catalysis. Current studies of the Quiocho group focus mainly on membrane fusion/secretion and vesicular trafficking.



CONFERENCE ORGANIZERS
Enoch P. Baldwin, Ph.D.
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology
University of California, Davis

Andrew J. Fisher, Ph.D.
Department of Chemistry
University of California, Davis

David K. Wilson, Ph.D.
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology
University of California, Davis


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