| Literature DB >> 25075325 |
Matthias Frank1, David B Carlson2, Mark S Hunter1, Garth J Williams3, Marc Messerschmidt3, Nadia A Zatsepin4, Anton Barty5, W Henry Benner1, Kaiqin Chu6, Alexander T Graf1, Stefan P Hau-Riege1, Richard A Kirian5, Celestino Padeste7, Tommaso Pardini1, Bill Pedrini7, Brent Segelke1, M Marvin Seibert3, John C H Spence4, Ching-Ju Tsai7, Stephen M Lane6, Xiao-Dan Li7, Gebhard Schertler7, Sebastien Boutet3, Matthew Coleman1, James E Evans8.
Abstract
X-ray diffraction patterns from two-dimensional (2-D) protein crystals obtained using femtosecond X-ray pulses from an X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) are presented. To date, it has not been possible to acquire transmission X-ray diffraction patterns from individual 2-D protein crystals due to radiation damage. However, the intense and ultrafast pulses generated by an XFEL permit a new method of collecting diffraction data before the sample is destroyed. Utilizing a diffract-before-destroy approach at the Linac Coherent Light Source, Bragg diffraction was acquired to better than 8.5 Å resolution for two different 2-D protein crystal samples each less than 10 nm thick and maintained at room temperature. These proof-of-principle results show promise for structural analysis of both soluble and membrane proteins arranged as 2-D crystals without requiring cryogenic conditions or the formation of three-dimensional crystals.Entities:
Keywords: femtosecond crystallography; membrane protein; single layer X-ray diffraction; two-dimensional protein crystal
Year: 2014 PMID: 25075325 PMCID: PMC4062087 DOI: 10.1107/S2052252514001444
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IUCrJ ISSN: 2052-2525 Impact factor: 4.769
Figure 1Bragg diffraction at sub-nanometer resolution from soluble protein 2-D crystals. (a) Background-subtracted diffraction pattern for 2-D crystals of streptavidin. Blue circles signify resolution rings at 30.0, 15.0 and 7.5 Å (inner to outer). The zoomed-in red circles indicate Bragg spots with highest resolution at 8.0 Å, (h, k) = (−10, 2) and (2, 10), while the black box zoom highlights two lattice spots at intermediate resolution. The diffraction patterns were acquired with a sample-to-detector distance of 560 mm and a photon energy of 8448 eV. Owing to C 222 symmetry (h + k = 2n), the innermost reflections are (0, 2), (1, 1) and (2, 0). (b) 2-D electron density projection map (2 × 2 unit cells) from coupling the observed integrated peak intensities with the corresponding calculated phases from the known crystal structure. (c) Ribbon diagram of a 2 × 2 unit cell of streptavidin created using the known crystal structure, symmetry and unit cell for comparison with (b). The scale bar is equivalent for panels (b) and (c).
Figure 2Bragg diffraction at sub-nanometer resolution from membrane protein 2-D crystals. (a) Background-subtracted diffraction patterns for 2-D crystals of bacteriorhodopsin. Blue circles signify resolution rings at 30.0, 15.0 and 7.5 Å (inner to outer). The zoomed-in red circle highlights the peaks with highest resolution at 8.5 and 8.7 Å, (h, k) = (2, 5) and (3, 4), respectively. The diffraction patterns were acquired with a sample-to-detector distance of 340 mm and a photon energy of 8448 eV. (b) Experimental 2-D electron density projection map (2 × 2 unit cells) from coupling the observed integrated peak intensities with the corresponding calculated phases from the known crystal structure of bacteriorhodopsin. (c) Ribbon diagram (2 × 2 unit cells) of bacteriorhodopsin created using the known crystal structure, symmetry and unit cell for comparison with (b). The scale bar is equivalent for panels (b) and (c).
Figure 3Evaluating the quality of experimental projection maps by randomly varying the observed peak amplitudes. The F columns of the HKL files used to generate the projection maps in Figs. 1(b) ▶ and 2(b) ▶ were extracted using Matlab and either randomly rearranged (relative to their associated reflections and phases) or randomly kicked (modulated) by factors ranging from 50% to 300%. Ten iterations of each randomization method were performed and three of the 20 resulting maps are shown for streptavidin (a) and bacteriorhodopsin (b). File names are displayed for each iteration and ‘rand’ represents the random rearrangement tests while ‘kick’ represents the random modulation tests. The projection maps from the experimentally measured amplitudes ‘exp’ are shown (bottom right) for comparison. For both streptavidin and bacteriorhodopsin, the experimentally measured projection map had the highest match (cross-correlation) to the known structure. In some of the randomized maps the correlation coefficient approaches the level seen for the experimentally measured maps (‘high’) but the majority of maps show significant differences in the projected density and had low correlation (‘low’). Tables comparing the HKL file details corresponding to each map are shown on the right. For quick visualization of the amplitude hierarchy, the highest and second highest F c value for each map is highlighted in the table in light red and light blue, respectively. While randomized amplitude tests that gave rise to high map correlations maintained the overall hierarchy of the experimentally measured amplitudes for low-order reflections (which strongly influence the overall density distribution), disrupting the amplitude hierarchy as seen in the low correlation maps (either through amplitude rearrangement or modulation) adversely affects the resulting projection maps. This suggests that even though a single-shot measurement with LCLS will yield structure factors with large error bars due to the fluctuating source parameters that ultimately need to be averaged over multiple crystals to converge to reliable values, the presented results clearly yield better structures than randomized Bragg intensities and therefore the intensities measured are not random.