| Literature DB >> 28083542 |
Christopher Kupitz1, Jose L Olmos2, Mark Holl3, Lee Tremblay4, Kanupriya Pande, Suraj Pandey1, Dominik Oberthür, Mark Hunter5, Mengning Liang5, Andrew Aquila5, Jason Tenboer1, George Calvey6, Andrea Katz6, Yujie Chen6, Max O Wiedorn7, Juraj Knoska7, Alke Meents8, Valerio Majriani, Tyler Norwood1, Ishwor Poudyal1, Thomas Grant9, Mitchell D Miller2, Weijun Xu2, Aleksandra Tolstikova7, Andrew Morgan7, Markus Metz7, Jose M Martin-Garcia10, James D Zook10, Shatabdi Roy-Chowdhury10, Jesse Coe10, Nirupa Nagaratnam10, Domingo Meza10, Raimund Fromme10, Shibom Basu10, Matthias Frank11, Thomas White7, Anton Barty7, Sasa Bajt7, Oleksandr Yefanov7, Henry N Chapman, Nadia Zatsepin3, Garrett Nelson3, Uwe Weierstall3, John Spence3, Peter Schwander1, Lois Pollack6, Petra Fromme10, Abbas Ourmazd1, George N Phillips2, Marius Schmidt1.
Abstract
Mix-and-inject serial crystallography (MISC) is a technique designed to image enzyme catalyzed reactions in which small protein crystals are mixed with a substrate just prior to being probed by an X-ray pulse. This approach offers several advantages over flow cell studies. It provides (i) room temperature structures at near atomic resolution, (ii) time resolution ranging from microseconds to seconds, and (iii) convenient reaction initiation. It outruns radiation damage by using femtosecond X-ray pulses allowing damage and chemistry to be separated. Here, we demonstrate that MISC is feasible at an X-ray free electron laser by studying the reaction of M. tuberculosis ß-lactamase microcrystals with ceftriaxone antibiotic solution. Electron density maps of the apo-ß-lactamase and of the ceftriaxone bound form were obtained at 2.8 Å and 2.4 Å resolution, respectively. These results pave the way to study cyclic and non-cyclic reactions and represent a new field of time-resolved structural dynamics for numerous substrate-triggered biological reactions.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28083542 PMCID: PMC5178802 DOI: 10.1063/1.4972069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Struct Dyn ISSN: 2329-7778 Impact factor: 2.920
FIG. 1.Data collection schematic showing the T-junction set-up used for a mixing time of about 2 s. The T-junction was placed outside of the nozzle rod in our experiment but could also be engineered to fit inside closer to the interaction region for shorter mixing times.
FIG. 2.Electron density in the catalytic cleft of BlaC. (a) Refined model of the entire tetramer (σ = 1.1) in the asymmetric unit after mixing. The mixed electron density (2Fo-Fc) is shown in blue in the binding pockets. Subunits A and C contain phosphate while subunits B and D have a bound ceftriaxone, with the electron density of D being slightly stronger. (b) Enlarged section of subunit D showing the unmixed ED, which corresponds to a bound phosphate. (c) Enlarged section of subunit D showing the mixed ED (blue electron density) with ceftriaxone modelled in. Slightly different views of the same subunit binding pocket are shown in (b) and (c); however, there are minimal changes to the ligand binding sphere (see supplementary material, Table S2).