Monthly Archives: May 2020

Storing variables in Jupyter Notebooks using %store magic

We’ve all been there. You’ve just run an expensive computation in your Jupyter Notebook and are about to draw those conclusions which will prove that your theories were right all along (until you find the sixteen bugs in your code which render them invalid, but that’s an issue for a different time). Then at the critical moment, your flatmate begins streaming their Lord Of The Rings marathon in 4k and your already temperamental Wi-Fi severs your connection to the department servers in protest, crashing your Jupyter Notebook, leaving your hopes and dreams in tatters.

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Editors for remote development

The ongoing COVID-19 situation has forced us all to dramatically rethink how we work, with many industries struggling to adjust their on-site procedures to ensure the safety of workers, and many more adapting to support much of their workforce in working from home. As a largely computational research group, we are incredibly fortunate in our ability to carry out most of our work remotely, and our department’s wonderful IT and administrative support staff have enabled a smooth transition to remote working.

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Electrostatic interactions govern extreme nascent protein ejection times from ribosomes and can delay ribosome recycling

Finishing up a lingering project from your PhD almost a year into your postdoc is a great feeling, especially when it has actually been about 3 years in the making.

Though somewhat outside of the usual scope of activities in OPIG, I encourage you to take a look if the below summary grabs your interest. The full paper and supporting materials (including some movies which took entirely too long to make) can be found at https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jacs.9b12264.

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When antibodies go wrong: how antibodies can help viruses infect cells

I’ve been keeping up to date with the latest coronavirus vaccine developments using Derek Lowe’s blog, a resource which I cannot recommend highly enough. A recent post mentioned that vaccines developers are looking out for signs of antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE), which I vaguely remembered from my undergraduate biochemistry days researching an essay on dengue fever. ADE is an interesting immunology phenomenon, and so I thought I’d treat you all to a brief introduction to the issue.

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The Coronavirus Antibody Database (CoV-AbDab)

We are happy to announce the release of CoV-AbDab, our database tracking all coronavirus binding antibodies and nanobodies with molecular-level metadata. The database can be searched and downloaded here: http://opig.stats.ox.ac.uk/webapps/coronavirus

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