As someone who spent their entire academic career, from B.Sc. to M.Sc. to Ph.D., within a Kavli Institute for Nanoscience Discovery (first in Delft and now in Oxford), I’ve had the privilege of seeing firsthand just how beautifully intricate the nanoscale world can be. Now, as my research focuses on lipid nanoparticles for genetic therapeutics and vaccines, I would like to use this platform to advocate for what I believe is one of the most transformative frontiers in modern medicine: the rational design of nanomaterials for therapeutic delivery.
Continue readingCategory Archives: Cryo-Electron Microscopy (cryoEM)
CryoEM is now the dominant technique for solving antibody structures
Last year, the Structural Antibody Database (SAbDab) listed a record-breaking 894 new antibody structures, driven in no small part by the continued efforts of the researchers to understand SARS-CoV-2.

In this blog post I wanted to highlight the major driving force behind this curve – the huge increase in cryo electron microscopy (cryoEM) data – and the implications of this for the field of structure-based antibody informatics.
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