| Literature DB >> 23765294 |
Jeremy T Madden1, Scott J Toth, Christopher M Dettmar, Justin A Newman, Robert A Oglesbee, Hartmut G Hedderich, R Michael Everly, Michael Becker, Judith A Ronau, Susan K Buchanan, Vadim Cherezov, Marie E Morrow, Shenglan Xu, Dale Ferguson, Oleg Makarov, Chittaranjan Das, Robert Fischetti, Garth J Simpson.
Abstract
Nonlinear optical (NLO) instrumentation has been integrated with synchrotron X-ray diffraction (XRD) for combined single-platform analysis, initially targeting applications for automated crystal centering. Second-harmonic-generation microscopy and two-photon-excited ultraviolet fluorescence microscopy were evaluated for crystal detection and assessed by X-ray raster scanning. Two optical designs were constructed and characterized; one positioned downstream of the sample and one integrated into the upstream optical path of the diffractometer. Both instruments enabled protein crystal identification with integration times between 80 and 150 µs per pixel, representing a ∼10(3)-10(4)-fold reduction in the per-pixel exposure time relative to X-ray raster scanning. Quantitative centering and analysis of phenylalanine hydroxylase from Chromobacterium violaceum cPAH, Trichinella spiralis deubiquitinating enzyme TsUCH37, human κ-opioid receptor complex kOR-T4L produced in lipidic cubic phase (LCP), intimin prepared in LCP, and α-cellulose samples were performed by collecting multiple NLO images. The crystalline samples were characterized by single-crystal diffraction patterns, while α-cellulose was characterized by fiber diffraction. Good agreement was observed between the sample positions identified by NLO and XRD raster measurements for all samples studied.Entities:
Keywords: LCP; NLO; SHG; SONICC; TPE-UVF; XRD; centering; microscopy; protein; two-photon
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23765294 PMCID: PMC3682636 DOI: 10.1107/S0909049513007942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Figure 1(a) Schematic of the downstream NLO microscope; (b) schematic of the upstream NLO microscope; (c) close-up view of the downstream NLO microscope, with the solid arrow representing incident laser propagation (red, 1060 nm) and dashed arrows representing the frequency-doubled signal (green, SHG at 530 nm); (d) close-up view of the upstream NLO microscope, with solid arrows representing incident laser propagation (red, 1060 nm; green, 530 nm) and dashed arrows representing the measured signal (green, SHG at 530 nm; blue, TPE-UVF).
Figure 2(a) Bright-field image of a T. spiralis UCH37 1-226/UbVME complex crystal (∼100 µm thick) and the corresponding (b) epi-SHG, (c) trans-SHG, (d) TPE-UVF and (e) X-ray raster scan within the 300 × 300 µm box. (f) X-ray diffraction of a representative 10 µm-diameter area from (e). X-ray energy: 12 keV; exposure time: 1 s; photon flux: 2.7 × 109 photons s−1 (10-fold attenuation); detector distance: 300 mm; maximum theoretical resolution: 2.25 Å. The large difference in the epi- and trans-SHG signals is expected for thick samples owing to the difference in the forward and backward coherence length. The intensities of the two directions will approach equality as the sample thickness approaches the backwards coherence length (∼100 nm). Scale bars are 100 µm. (Three darkened spots, apparent in this figure, arose from separate X-ray ‘burn tests’ to assess X-ray damage, the results of which will be published in a future study.)
Figure 3(a) Bright-field for an intimin protein crystal generated in LCP with corresponding (b) trans-SHG and (c) X-ray raster summary overlay showing corrected Bragg-like reflection counts. (d) X-ray diffraction of the 5 µm-diameter area corresponding to the red circles in each image, with X-ray energy 12.0 keV, exposure time 1 s, photon flux 2.7 × 1010 photons s−1 (unattenuated beam), sample-to-detector distance of 300 mm, resulting in a maximum theoretical resolution of 2.25 Å. Scale bars are 50 µm. Cross-hairs were added to (a) and (b) to assist in orienting the field of view with respect to the diffraction raster images.
Figure 4(a) Bright-field image of a membrane protein (human κ-opioid receptor complex) crystal in lipidic cubic phase and the corresponding (b) trans-SHG and (c) TPE-UVF, with (d) an X-ray raster summary overlay showing corrected Bragg-like reflection counts. (e) X-ray diffraction of the 5 µm-diameter area corresponding to the red circles in each image. X-ray energy: 12.0 keV; exposure time: 1 s; photon flux: 2.7 × 1010 photons s−1 (unattenuated beam); sample-to-detector distance: 300 mm; maximum theoretical resolution: 2.25 Å. Scale bars are 20 µm. Cross-hairs were added to (b) and (c) to assist in orienting the fields of view with respect to the bright-field and diffraction raster images.
Figure 5(a) Bright-field image of α-cellulose fibers and the corresponding (b) epi-SHG and (c) trans-SHG images, all 300 × 300 µm. (d) X-ray diffraction of a 10 µm-diameter area within the red circle of each image. X-ray energy: 12.0 keV; exposure time: 1 s; photon flux: 2.7 × 1010 photons s−1 (unattenuated beam); sample-to-detector distance: 300 mm; maximum theoretical resolution: 2.25 Å. Scale bars are 100 µm. Cross-hairs were added to (b) and (c) to assist in orienting the fields of view with respect to the bright-field image.