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Serial millisecond crystallography for routine room-temperature structure determination at synchrotrons.

Authors :
Weinert T
Olieric N
Cheng R
Brünle S
James D
Ozerov D
Gashi D
Vera L
Marsh M
Jaeger K
Dworkowski F
Panepucci E
Basu S
Skopintsev P
Doré AS
Geng T
Cooke RM
Liang M
Prota AE
Panneels V
Nogly P
Ermler U
Schertler G
Hennig M
Steinmetz MO
Wang M
Standfuss J
Source :
Nature communications [Nat Commun] 2017 Sep 14; Vol. 8 (1), pp. 542. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Sep 14.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Historically, room-temperature structure determination was succeeded by cryo-crystallography to mitigate radiation damage. Here, we demonstrate that serial millisecond crystallography at a synchrotron beamline equipped with high-viscosity injector and high frame-rate detector allows typical crystallographic experiments to be performed at room-temperature. Using a crystal scanning approach, we determine the high-resolution structure of the radiation sensitive molybdenum storage protein, demonstrate soaking of the drug colchicine into tubulin and native sulfur phasing of the human G protein-coupled adenosine receptor. Serial crystallographic data for molecular replacement already converges in 1,000-10,000 diffraction patterns, which we collected in 3 to maximally 82 minutes. Compared with serial data we collected at a free-electron laser, the synchrotron data are of slightly lower resolution, however fewer diffraction patterns are needed for de novo phasing. Overall, the data we collected by room-temperature serial crystallography are of comparable quality to cryo-crystallographic data and can be routinely collected at synchrotrons.Serial crystallography was developed for protein crystal data collection with X-ray free-electron lasers. Here the authors present several examples which show that serial crystallography using high-viscosity injectors can also be routinely employed for room-temperature data collection at synchrotrons.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2041-1723
Volume :
8
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28912485
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-00630-4