| Literature DB >> 25866654 |
Przemyslaw Nogly1, Daniel James2, Dingjie Wang2, Thomas A White3, Nadia Zatsepin2, Anastasya Shilova4, Garrett Nelson2, Haiguang Liu2, Linda Johansson5, Michael Heymann3, Kathrin Jaeger1, Markus Metz6, Cecilia Wickstrand7, Wenting Wu1, Petra Båth7, Peter Berntsen7, Dominik Oberthuer6, Valerie Panneels1, Vadim Cherezov5, Henry Chapman8, Gebhard Schertler9, Richard Neutze7, John Spence2, Isabel Moraes10, Manfred Burghammer11, Joerg Standfuss1, Uwe Weierstall2.
Abstract
Lipidic cubic phases (LCPs) have emerged as successful matrixes for the crystallization of membrane proteins. Moreover, the viscous LCP also provides a highly effective delivery medium for serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX) at X-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs). Here, the adaptation of this technology to perform serial millisecond crystallography (SMX) at more widely available synchrotron microfocus beamlines is described. Compared with conventional microcrystallography, LCP-SMX eliminates the need for difficult handling of individual crystals and allows for data collection at room temperature. The technology is demonstrated by solving a structure of the light-driven proton-pump bacteriorhodopsin (bR) at a resolution of 2.4 Å. The room-temperature structure of bR is very similar to previous cryogenic structures but shows small yet distinct differences in the retinal ligand and proton-transfer pathway.Entities:
Keywords: XFEL; bacteriorhodopsin; lipidic cubic phases; protein crystallography
Year: 2015 PMID: 25866654 PMCID: PMC4392771 DOI: 10.1107/S2052252514026487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IUCrJ ISSN: 2052-2525 Impact factor: 4.769
Figure 1Data collection and refinement statistics for the SMX and CRYO bR structures. The upper inset shows the development of the correlation between the two indexing possibilities over the number of crystals used to resolve the indexing ambiguity. The middle inset shows zone-axis plots of the data before and after solving indexing ambiguity. Colours are proportional to the square root of the intensity (i.e. I 1/2). The lower inset plots the signal-to-noise ratio, expressed as I/σ(I), against the resolution of the SMX data.
Data-collection and refinement statistics for SMX bR and cryo bR structures.
| SMX | Cryo | |
|---|---|---|
| Data collection | ||
| X-ray source | ID13, ESRF | PXI-X06SA, SLS |
| Detector | Rayonix MX-170 CCD | PILATUS 6M |
| Temperature (K) | 294 | 100 |
| Wavelength () | 0.954 | 1.000 |
| Beam size (m) | 2 3 | 50 10 |
| Average crystal size (m) | 540 540 15 | 50 50 10 |
| Flux (photonss1) | 9.1 1011 | 5.9 1011 |
| Space group |
|
|
| Unit-cell parameters (, ) |
|
|
| Oscillation ()/exposure (ms) | n.a./1050 (81% 25) | 0.1/150 |
| No. of collected images | 1343092 | 2532 |
| No. of hits/indexed images | 12982/5691 | 2532/2532 |
| Total/unique reflections | 1223766/9655 | 234541/16643 |
| Resolution range () | 36.562.40 (2.462.40) | 46.571.90 (1.941.90) |
| Completeness (%) | 100.0 (100.0) | 100.0 (100.0) |
| Multiplicity | 127 (88.8) | 14.1 (14.3) |
|
| 3.57 (1.16) | 17.90 (1.80) |
| CC*
| 0.981 (0.658) | 1.000 (0.841) |
|
| 22.4 (107) | 2.6 (50) |
| Matthews coefficient | 2.50 | 2.21 |
| Solvent content (%) | 50.76 | 44.27 |
|
| 45.2 | 33.4 |
| Refinement | ||
| Resolution range () | 31.402.40 (2.462.40) | 52.421.90 (1.951.90) |
| No. of reflections (total/test set) | 9192/441 | 15773/841 |
|
| 20.5/24.9 | 17.1/21.4 |
| No. of atoms | ||
| Overall | 1848 | 1877 |
| Protein | 1756 | 1723 |
| Retinal | 20 | 20 |
| Water | 10 | 30 |
| Lipids and other | 62 | 104 |
| Average | ||
| Overall | 40.47 | 28.50 |
| Protein | 39.04 | 27.11 |
| Retinal | 52.67 | 24.61 |
| Water | 55.94 | 36.52 |
| Lipids and other | 74.47 | 49.93 |
| R.m.s. deviations | ||
| Bond lengths () | 0.008 | 0.009 |
| Bond angles () | 1.01 | 1.21 |
| Ramachandran favoured (%) | 98.2 | 98.9 |
| Ramachandran outliers (%) | 0.4 | 0.0 |
CC* = [2CC1/2/(1 + CC1/2)]1/2.
R split = .
Figure 2The experimental setup at the ID13 microfocus beamline. (a) (1) Microscope focused on the jet. (2) LCP injector with (3) nozzle close to the beamstop. (b) A view of the LCP nozzle as seen through the microscope. LCP was extruded towards the left as viewed in this projection, and the X-ray beam hits the stream at a distance of 40 µm from the end of the coned capillary. The capillary ID is 50 µm. A co-flowing gas stream (green arrows) keeps the LCP stream straight. (c) Schematic diagram of the setup. The water used to drive the injector is shown in blue, the LCP in red and the gas in green. (d) An SMX diffraction pattern from a bR microcrystal, with visible Bragg spots extending out to 2.2 Å resolution.
Figure 3(Centre) Comparison of bR structures solved by SMX and conventional cryocrystallography (Cryo). The protein backbone of the room-temperature SMX structure (purple) superimposes well with the Cryo structure (blue). (Bottom) Retinal omit maps [blue (Cryo) or purple (SMX) mesh, 2F o − F c at 1.5σ; green mesh, F o − F c at 2.5σ] indicate increased flexibility in the β-ionone ring. The upper insets show a different rotamer for E194 involved in proton translocation, and indications for radiation damage on D38 exposed to the extramembrane environment.
Figure 4Cluster analysis of bR ground-state structures using hierarchical sorting. This analysis sorts according to the average of the absolute value of the difference between two internal distance matrices [S (Å)] calculated on Cα atoms (Wickstrand et al., 2014 ▶). PDB codes are given for all deposited wild-type structures of bR in its resting state. LCP bR structures are marked in purple. The room-temperature SMX structure (bRSMX) and the structure of bR solved here using conventional data collection and cryocooling (bRcryo) are marked in red. Inset: The internal distance matrix for bRSMX–bRcryo shows that cryocooling compresses helices A and B slightly towards helices D, E and F.