| Literature DB >> 23765312 |
Petra Pernot1, Adam Round, Ray Barrett, Alejandro De Maria Antolinos, Alexandre Gobbo, Elspeth Gordon, Julien Huet, Jerôme Kieffer, Mario Lentini, Muriel Mattenet, Christian Morawe, Christoph Mueller-Dieckmann, Staffan Ohlsson, Werner Schmid, John Surr, Pascal Theveneau, Louiza Zerrad, Sean McSweeney.
Abstract
Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) measurements of proteins in solution are becoming increasingly popular with biochemists and structural biologists owing to the presence of dedicated high-throughput beamlines at synchrotron sources. As part of the ESRF Upgrade program a dedicated instrument for performing SAXS from biological macromolecules in solution (BioSAXS) has been installed at the renovated BM29 location. The optics hutch has been equipped with new optical components of which the two principal elements are a fixed-exit double multilayer monochromator and a 1.1 m-long toroidal mirror. These new dedicated optics give improved beam characteristics (compared with the previous set-up on ID14-3) regarding the energy tunability, flux and focusing at the detector plane leading to reduced parasitic scattering and an extended s-range. User experiments on the beamline have been successfully carried out since June 2012. A description of the new BioSAXS beamline and the set-up characteristics are presented together with examples of obtained data.Entities:
Keywords: automation and high throughput; online HPLC; proteins in solution; small-angle X-ray scattering; structural biology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23765312 PMCID: PMC3943554 DOI: 10.1107/S0909049513010431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Figure 1Layout of the BM29 BioSAXS beamline with the source-to-main-element distances.
Beamline details
| Beamline name | BM29 |
| Source type | Bending magnet, centred at −9 mrad |
| Mirrors | 1.1 m-long Rh-coated toroid, 4 mrad |
| Monochromator | Double multilayer, 2.96 nm spacing |
| Energy range (keV) | 7–15 |
| Wavelength range (Å) | 0.82–1.77 |
| Beam size (uncollimated) (µm) | 4000 × 4000 |
| Beam size (collimated, typical) (µm) | 500 × 500 at detector plane |
| Flux (uncollimated) (photons s−1) | 2 × 1013 (at 1.13 Å) |
| Flux (collimated, typical) (photons s−1) | 1.3 × 1013 (at 1.13 Å) |
| Goniometer | Robot or HPLC |
| Cryo capability | 277–333 K |
| Sample mounting | Quartz capillary |
| Detector type | CMOS hybrid pixel |
| Detector model | Pilatus 1M |
| 2θ capabilities | 0–4° |
Figure 2Inside view of the double ML monochromator vessel.
Figure 3Experimental hutch set-up with HPLC and sample-changer units, slit box (blue), flight tube and detector at the back.
Figure 4Data collection software BsxCuBE including the display of two-dimensional raw images and one-dimensional curves online.
Figure 5Buffer-subtracted experimental scattering pattern from bovine serum albumin (BSA) and lysozyme (LYS) scaled for visualization. The inset graph represents scattering from water (with empty capillary background subtracted), which was used for the absolute intensity calibration of sample curves.