about projects people publications resources resources visit us visit us search search

Quick Links

Featured Citations

Molecular insights into capsular polysaccharide secretion. Kuklewicz J, Zimmer J. Nature. 2024 Apr 25;628(8009):901–909.

Bitter taste receptor activation by cholesterol and an intracellular tastant. Kim Y, Gumpper RH et al. Nature. 2024 Apr 18;628(8008):664–671.

Structure and assembly of a bacterial gasdermin pore. Johnson AG, Mayer ML et al. Nature. 2024 Apr 18;628(8008):657–663.

Structural basis of DNA crossover capture by Escherichia coli DNA gyrase. Vayssières M, Marechal N et al. Science. 2024 Apr 12;384(6692):227-232.

Molecular mechanism of actin filament elongation by formins. Oosterheert W, Boiero Sanders M et al. Science. 2024 Apr 12;384(6692):eadn9560.

More citations...

News

January 22, 2024

ChimeraX 1.7.1 is available, with fixes for a few miscellaneous bugs that were identified after the 1.7 release.

December 19, 2023

The ChimeraX 1.7 production release is available! See the change log for what's new. Future Mac releases will require macOS 11 or higher.

November 6, 2023

The ChimeraX 1.7 release candidate is available – please try it and report any issues. See the change log for what's new.

Previous news...

Upcoming Events


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, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative grant EOSS4-0000000439, and the Office of Cyber Infrastructure and Computational Biology, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

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.

More features...

Example Image

cyclodextrin pore

Cyclodextrin Pore

The outer-membrane protein CymA admits bulky molecules into the periplasmic space of Klebsiella oxytoca. Here, CymA (PDB 4d5d chain A) is depicted in a style reminiscent of a diagnostic X-ray, with transparent molecular surface and β-strand “ribs” in white. The protein has ingested α-cyclodextrin (top) and β-cyclodextrin (bottom), bound at the entry site and near the exit, respectively. Cyclodextrin carbon atoms are shown in blue-gray and oxygen atoms in brick red. For image setup, see the command file xray.cxc.

More images...



About RBVI | Projects | People | Publications | Resources | Visit Us

Copyright 2018 Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.