| Literature DB >> 20382986 |
Abstract
Radiation damage inflicted during diffraction data collection in macromolecular crystallography has re-emerged in the last decade as a major experimental and computational challenge, as even for crystals held at 100 K it can result in severe data-quality degradation and the appearance in solved structures of artefacts which affect biological interpretations. Here, the observable symptoms and basic physical processes involved in radiation damage are described and the concept of absorbed dose as the basic metric against which to monitor the experimentally observed changes is outlined. Investigations into radiation damage in macromolecular crystallography are ongoing and the number of studies is rapidly increasing. The current literature on the subject is compiled as a resource for the interested researcher.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20382986 PMCID: PMC2852297 DOI: 10.1107/S0907444910008656
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr ISSN: 0907-4449
Figure 1Global radiation-damage indicators as a function of dose for four holoferritin crystals (Owen et al., 2006 ▶). (a) Mean I/mean I 0, (b) unit-cell volume, (c) R value and (d) Wilson B value.
Figure 2Specific structural damage inflicted on a cryocooled crystal of apoferritin during sequential data sets collected on beamline ID14-4 at ESRF. (a) 2F o − F c map of Glu63 contoured at 0.2 e Å−3 after a dose of 2.5 MGy and (b) after 50 MGy. (c) 2F o − F c map of Met96 contoured at 0.2 e Å−3 after a dose of 2.5 MGy and (d) after 50 MGy, showing loss of electron density around the disordered atoms (Garman & Owen, 2006 ▶).
Figure 3Photograph of a 400 µm neuraminidase crystal (subtype N9 from avian influenza isolated from a noddy tern), space group I432, that has been irradiated on ID14-4 at the ESRF at 100 K and then allowed to warm up to RT. The three black marks are from the 100 × 100 µm beam; the discolouration is an indication of radiation damage.
Figure 4An idealized plot of R d, the pairwise R factor between identical and symmetry-related reflections occurring on different diffraction images, plotted against the difference in dose, ΔD, between the images on which the reflections were collected (Diederichs, 2006 ▶). The plot is a straight line parallel to the x axis if there is no damage, but rises linearly in the presence of damage.
Figure 5A plot of B rel (one value per data set collected on ID14-4 at the ESRF) against dose for two HEWL crystals, one native and the other cocrystallized with the scavengers ascorbate (Asc) and 1,4-benzoquinone (Quin). The solid lines represent linear fits to the data: the increase in B rel is only marginally slower with dose for the scavenger cocrystals, showing (when combined with an analysis of the resulting electron-density maps) that this particular combination is not effective in reducing the rate of damage (Southworth-Davies, 2008 ▶).
Figure 6Illustration of radiation damage over a wide range of time scales and dose. Left, UV–vis absorption spectrum (blue, lowest; red, highest) of a cryocooled solution of cysteine, showing an intense peak at 400 nm corresponding to disulfide-anion radical production. The vertical bands arise from 1 s X-ray irradiations followed by 5–8 s of beam off, during which the 400 nm peak decays away (Southworth-Davies & Garman, 2007 ▶). Centre, F o − F c difference density map (contoured at −2.5σ) of the Cys76–Cys94 bond in a HEWL structure calculated using the sixth data set in a sequential collection from one crystal (Murray & Garman, 2002 ▶). The bond is broken and the S atoms are delocalized. Right, decay of the normalized diffraction intensity of sequential data sets collected from four different holoferritin crystals (Owen et al., 2006 ▶). Figure modified from Owen, Pearson et al. (2009 ▶).
Figure 7Primary X-ray interaction processes with the atoms of the crystal and solvent. (a) Elastic (Thomson, coherent) scattering. The waves are phase-shifted by 180° on scattering and add vectorially to give the diffraction pattern. (b) Compton (incoherent) scattering. The X-ray transfers some energy to an atomic electron and thus has lower energy (higher wavelength) after the interaction. Energy is lost in the crystal, contributing to the absorbed dose. (c) Photoelectric absorption. The X-ray transfers all its energy to an atomic electron, which is then ejected and can give rise to the ionization of up to 500 other atoms. The excited atom can then emit a characteristic X-ray or an Auger electron to return to its ground state.
Compendium of the current literature on MX radiation damage
Every effort has been made to make this compilation exhaustive: a copy is maintained and updated at the URL http://www.biop.ox.ac.uk/www/garman/gindex.html. References to the pre-1990 papers on RT MX damage studies can be found in §1.
| Crystal-related questions | |
| What is the minimum crystal size? | Gonzalez & Nave (1994 |
| What affects X-ray absorption? (and | Murray |
| Can the unit-cell expansion be used as a metric? | Teng & Moffat (2000 |
| What is the effect of temperature ( | Garman (1999 |
| Does the addition of radical scavengers increase dose tolerance? | Murray & Garman (2002 |
| What are the susceptibilities of particular amino acids to specific damage and why? | Weik |
| X-ray beam-related questions | |
| What is the effect of changing the incident wavelength? | Arndt (1984 |
| Is it beneficial to change/regulate the dose/dose-rate regime? | Teng & Moffat (2000 |
| What is the effect of the beam size compared with the crystal size? | Schulze-Briese |
| Does the beam heat the crystal? | Kuzay |
| Methods developments and applications | |
| Development of convenient flux calibration of beamlines | Owen |
| Development of on-line and off-line spectroscopy (UV–vis, Raman, XAS, EPR) | Weik |
| Studying the effect on the success of MAD/SAD phasing | Rice |
| Development of RIP/RIPAS | Ravelli |
| Application/effect of radiation damage to/on the study of biological mechanisms | Matsui |
| Metalloproteins | Schlichting |
| Phase transitions and/or radiation-induced changes with temperature-controlled cryocrystallography to study macromolecular function | Schlichting |
| Software developments | Diederichs |
| Finding strategies to minimize radiation damage in data collections | Berglund |
| Extending the understanding of radiation damage in RT data collections | Southworth-Davies |
| Studying RNA/DNA damage | Ennifar |