• Molecular Membrane Biology (
Hartmut Michel, since 1987) • Structural Biology (
Werner Kühlbrandt, since 1997) • Biophysical Chemistry (
Ernst Bamberg, since 1993, em. since 2016) • Theoretical Biophysics (Gerhard Hummer, since 2013) • Molecular Sociology (Martin Beck, since 2019) • Molecular Neurogenetics (Peter Mombaerts, from 2006 until 2010) A prerequisite for the understanding of the fundamental processes of life is the knowledge of the structure of the participating macromolecules. Two of the four departments are devoted to the challenging task of determining the structure of
membrane proteins. Under the direction of
Hartmut Michel (
Nobel Prize in Chemistry of 1988 for the first structure determination of a membrane protein), the Department of Molecular Membrane Biology approaches this problem primarily by
x-ray crystallography, whereas the Department of Structural Biology, headed by Werner Kühlbrandt, uses the complementary technique of
electron microscopy. The Department of Biophysical Chemistry, directed by
Ernst Bamberg, studies the function of these
proteins in native or reconstituted membranes by electrophysiological and spectroscopic methods. Since 2013, the institute hosts the Department of Theoretical Biophysics, directed by Gerhard Hummer focusing on development and implementation of broad range of computational and theoretical methods to bridge fundamental physics, chemistry and biology of molecular systems. In the Department of Molecular Sociology integrative cellular structural biology is studied by cryo-electron microscopy, biochemical and mass spectroscopic methods applied to nuclear pores, macromolecular machines that are responsible for the communication between the cell nucleus and the cytoplasm. ==Institute's history==