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Showing posts with label networking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label networking. Show all posts

Monday, April 5, 2010

Melbourne, FBDD & Facebook

I now have less than a month left in Melbourne and since we�ve just switched over to winter time perhaps the hint should be taken. It has certainly been fun and the project is nicely under control although past experience suggests that it�s usually not a good idea to say that. I�ve not lived in a city since the mid-80s when I was a post-doc in Minneapolis and have really enjoyed the ease of getting around and ready access some of the wide range of music that Melbourne offers. I enjoyed an excellent performance by the ACO Soloists at Hamer Hall and am hoping to return there for a strong dose of Bach in a week�s time. University College, where I�m currently staying, is running a concert series and the second of these promises to be as enjoyable as the first. One of the music tutors at UC plays flute in the VYSO and I got to see them in action last weekend with their truly awesome guest soloist Kana Ohashi. This was also an excellent opportunity to watch the violinists since I was in the third row. The soloist was truly kinetic (difficult to be otherwise with the Tchaikovsky) and the first violin nearest to me appeared to have been given a special 'first violin bob' by her hairdresser. Maybe they will patent it.

On my first trip to the Paris Cat Jazz Club, I found it closed due to flooding (it was the day of The Hailstorm but at least there were back-to-back episodes of Hogan�s Heroes on TV). On returning the following week I was lucky enough to catch Monique diMattina who is an extremely warm, engaging and talented performer. By the way she also writes and composes and, as luck would have it, will be returning there the week AFTER I leave Melbourne. While wandering round town one Saturday afternoon, I caught The Wishing Well on Bourke Street and their next local gig is also the week after I leave. Good reasons to come back, I guess.

Previously, I pointed you towards some LinkedIn groups that are particularly relevant to FBDD. There are also groups on facebook that you might want to take a look at. It�s a bit more difficult to keep discussions going using the facebook groups because you don�t get alerted by email in the same way that you do with LinkedIn. However there are a lot of folk on facebook (especially in universities) and I believe it can play a useful part in extending the FBDD web. Here is a selection of facebook groups that you may find useful:

Fragment Based Drug Discovery (This is the group that is linked to this blog. I do check it frequently and usually respond to queries.)

Crystallography Rocks (Once you�ve got fragments to bind, you�ll want to see how they bind.)

NMR (There are a number of elegant NMR techniques for detection of ligand binding and you�ll find plenty of expertise in this group.)

Chemoinformatics (Particularly relevant to screening library design)

Dan gave my round the world trip a very flattering mention at Practical Fragments which did remind me that I really need to do a post on FBDD in academia since Teddy (who used facebook to tell me where Rapamycin comes from) has also discussed this. As I�m a real sucker for peer pressure, I do promise to make sure that my next blog post focuses on this topic. The FBDD facebook group led to me giving a lecture (I normally call these harangues) in Santiago and through it I�ve also made a couple of contacts in Singapore where I�ll probably do a couple of talks. Being in a facebook group also got me a chance to look round the Australian Synchrotron during maintenance week, when you can get a better look at all the cool stuff. I�ll finish with some pics from that visit.







Saturday, March 27, 2010

FBDD and Networking

Reading an account of the session at the ACS on application of computational methods to FBDD, reminded me that it would be a good time to raise awareness of networking groups in this area. Both this blog and Practical Fragments allow readers to comment on posts although this tends not to happen with the frequency that it does at In the Pipeline, probably reflecting the huge readership, frequent updating and diverse content of what I consider to be the best drug discovery blog by a long way.

People interested in FBDD may already belong to a number of relevant LinkedIn groups. The groups offer some advantages over blogs for getting discussions going in that anyone can start a discussion and group members get alerted by email whenever somebody makes a new comment. I�ll list some of these below in case there are some that you�ve not yet heard about.

Fragment Based Drug Discovery (This group is linked by both FBDD blogs)

Label Free Assay Technology Group (It is the assay that makes FBDD possible. The weaker the binding that you can measure reliably, the more powerful your assay)

Structural Biology (X-ray Crystallography, NMR Spectroscopy, Electron Microscopy) (Generally you�re going to need crystal structures to take fragment hits forward)

Job opportunities in Computational Chemistry and Biology, Xray Crystallography, Fragment Based DD

Recently, I submitted the same item for discussion at a number of LinkedIn groups. I invited group members to share their views on the most appropriate technologies for detecting fragment binding. I learned about some new ways to configure SPR experiments and the use of Tm-shift assays. Most of the discussion was in the Structural Biology group (see discussion) although there was helpful input from the relatively new Label Free Assay Technology Group (see discussion) so thank you to all the participants. It was also great to see a couple of familiar faces from my days in Big Pharma, including a co-author from an article that a number of us wrote back in 2007