Coronavirus CellPAINT Contest
As the coronavirus swept across the globe this spring, the Scripps Research Center for Computational Structural Biology in association with the Research Collaboratory for Structural Bioinformatics Protein Data Bank drew attention to the virus’s structure through art.
They hosted a coronavirus image contest for illustrations created using CellPAINT, a software for drawing cellular and viral systems. Images could be submitted under the science category, in which drawings needed to accurately depict the coronavirus’s structure and biology, or the art category, in which images could be anything that amazes and inspires.
After receiving “dozens of entries…from around the world from middle school students to professionals,” the winners for each category were announced in June.
“The contest came forth at a time when almost everyone is struggling with the changes accompanying the pandemic,” says Best in Art winner Kanika Khanna. “Each of us are grappling with one or another grief and ‘hoping’ for something good to happen. This contest was a way for me to get out of my own grief and create something that would be a source of joy not only for me but may be someone else out there as well.”
She explains, “Who better to dedicate this creation to other than our ‘Heroes of hope’, the health care workers at the front line who are fighting the pandemic day in and day out, without any selfish motives? Putting their lives at risk, away from their families, I can’t even begin to imagine the agony they must be going through.”
Best in Science winner Marta Palma Rodríguez says, “I started using CellPAINT (web-based) to design the illustration. When I finished with the diagram, I used Adobe Photoshop CC 2019 to create the labels and correct the colors. As the receptor TMPRSS2, present in the target cell and very important in the viral priming, is not present in CellPAINT, I decided to look for a serin protease like protein in the PDB and to add it with this program.”
Each winner received an original painting by structural biologist and science illustrator David S. Goodsell.