With the advent of recombinant DNA techniques, an increasing number of proteins are being expressed in sufficient quantities to be crystallized for X-ray diffraction analysis. At the same time, the efficient handling of data required to analyze diffraction data from macromolecules and graphics capabilities to display structures obtained from this analysis are also advancing. Consequently, huge numbers of new macromolecular models, especially protein models derived from X-ray crystallographic analysis, have appeared in recent years.
I am a Phd student in a protein crystallography lab. I am fascinated by the technique. However i always found it difficult to connect different themes or information i learnt. This book helped me to connect a lot of missing dots
This book saved me
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
My lab is a crystallography lab. We call this "The Book" and hand it off to clueless new students who're starting to wonder just what exactly they've gotten themselves into and are deathly afraid of getting slaughtered by crystallography questions in their orals. The approach is very qualitative, which might be irritating to some, but bear in mind that many crystallographers are coming in from biology backgrounds and we just haven't had the mathematical training to grasp the quantitative approach and it's really, really rough to throw the structure factor equation in the face of a first-year grad student with a B.S. in biology (like I was when I began) and expect them to get it. The Book is a way to break it to us gently. If you want to understand what crystallography is and what crystallographers do, this is the book to read. If you want to be an actual crystallographer, this is a good place to start. Not everything a crystallographer needs is here but it's a good lead in to the math and physics and general voodoo involved in macromolecular crystallography.
The best introduction to the subject
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
This is the best introduction to crystallography I have ever come across. Which is quite an achievement because it's a rather complicated subject to study. In crystallography it's very common to find books which deal with either a totally descriptive approach or a totally mathematical approach. Rhodes' book bridges the gap between the two and gives the reader the right dose of jargon and explanation. He illustrates every point with plenty of figures as well as real life computer models of proteins. Before I came across this book, I was struggling and failing to understand Isomorphous Replacement, MAD, Solvent Flattening, Maps and Models, as well as the iterative refining of models. I think no other book comes even close to this book in explaining all these concepts in a simple format. This, I think is as clear as it can get without becoming oversimplified. A must have for all researchers and students whose work is connected to crystallography in any way; this would include crystallographers themselves, biochemists and molecular biologists and computational chemists.
"The" clearest one out there....
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
When it comes to this field of research, you get two types of references: (1) the 2-5 page quick intro that leaves you with the most basic overview of crystallography and (2) the 'hard core' books that go into such detail as to leave you breathless. This book is, in my opinion, the best transition book.For non-crystallographers, this book will teach enough about crystallography to allow you to read crystal structure articles and understand what is meant by all of the used statistics and such.For apprentice crystallographers, this is a wonderful intro into the field. Master the book, then move on to harder books to master it.Highly recommended. I still go back to it, when I teach people, to help me explain in the way that Gale Rhodes does!
A must for anyone interested in protein structure.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
A readable overview, superb for getting a feel for how crystallography works and what the results mean. There is also an excellent section on judging the quality of an atomic coordinate file, such as a PDB file you may download. Prof. Rhodes is now completing a second edition.
Excellent.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
The perfect bridge between simple introductions and more complete books, both difficult to understand for the non-crystallographer. Very clear explanations -crystal clear- and real examples from real papers. Just what I wanted to know. No more no less.
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