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The Virtual Lab of AI agents designs new SARS-CoV-2 nanobodies. Swanson K, Wu W et al. Nature. 2025 Oct 16;646(8085):716–723.

“Kiss-shrink-run” unifies mechanisms for synaptic vesicle exocytosis and hyperfast recycling. Tao CL, Tian CL et al. Science. 2025 Oct 16;390(6770):eads7954.

Structural basis for the dynamic regulation of mTORC1 by amino acids. Valenstein ML, Wranik M et al. Nature. 2025 Oct 9;646(8084):493–500.

One-shot design of functional protein binders with BindCraft. Pacesa M, Nickel L et al. Nature. 2025 Oct 9;646(8084):483–492.

A nanobody specific to prefusion glycoprotein B neutralizes HSV-1 and HSV-2. Vollmer B, Ebel H et al. Nature. 2025 Oct 9;646(8084):433–441.

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News

July 24, 2025

ChimeraX 1.10.1 is now available, fixing the problem in 1.10 of repeat registration requests to some users.

June 26, 2025

The ChimeraX 1.10 production release is available! See the change log for what's new.

May 7, 2025

The ChimeraX 1.10 release candidate is available – please try it and report any issues. See the change log for what's new.

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UCSF ChimeraX

UCSF ChimeraX (or simply ChimeraX) is the next-generation molecular visualization program from the Resource for Biocomputing, Visualization, and Informatics (RBVI), following UCSF Chimera. ChimeraX can be downloaded free of charge for academic, government, nonprofit, and personal use. Commercial users, please see ChimeraX commercial licensing.

ChimeraX is developed with support from National Institutes of Health R01-GM129325.

Bluesky logo ChimeraX on Bluesky: @chimerax.ucsf.edu

Feature Highlight

mitochondrial import receptor subunit TOMM40

AlphaFold Fetch

AlphaFold is an artificial intelligence method for predicting protein structures. With the AlphaFold tool or command, ChimeraX can search for and load predicted structures from the freely available AlphaFold Database, automatically coloring them by confidence value:

  • 100
    to 90
    – high accuracy
  • 90
    to 70
    – backbone accuracy
  • 70
    to 50
    – low confidence, caution
  • 50
    to 0
    – should not be interpreted, may be disordered

The figure shows the predicted structure of UniProt entry TOM40_HUMAN, a channel protein needed to import other proteins into mitochondria. See the command file tom40.cxc for fetching data and other setup (background color, etc.).

Opening a sequence from UniProt also opens a dialog in which its annotations or “features” can be clicked to highlight those regions in both the sequence and the associated 3D structure. The low-confidence part of this structure (orange and red) maps to compositionally biased and likely disordered regions near the N-terminus of the sequence.

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Example Image

The Human Ribosome

The architecture of the human ribosome has been determined at near-atomic resolution by electron microscopy (Anger et al., Nature 497:80 (2013)). The structure, comprising 82 proteins and five RNA molecules, is shown with shadows cast from all directions to accentuate depth. In the background are schematic representations of contacts between the component molecules.

See the image setup script card.cxc using the 'Tis the Season color palette (credit to MrsP). See also the RBVI holiday card gallery.

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