| Literature DB >> 28375148 |
Robin L Owen1, Danny Axford1, Darren A Sherrell1, Anling Kuo2, Oliver P Ernst2, Eike C Schulz3, R J Dwayne Miller3, Henrike M Mueller-Werkmeister2.
Abstract
The development of serial crystallography has been driven by the sample requirements imposed by X-ray free-electron lasers. Serial techniques are now being exploited at synchrotrons. Using a fixed-target approach to high-throughput serial sampling, it is demonstrated that high-quality data can be collected from myoglobin crystals, allowing room-temperature, low-dose structure determination. The combination of fixed-target arrays and a fast, accurate translation system allows high-throughput serial data collection at high hit rates and with low sample consumption.Entities:
Keywords: crystallography on a chip; fixed target; low dose; macromolecular crystallography; room-temperature crystallography; serial synchrotron crystallography
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28375148 PMCID: PMC5379936 DOI: 10.1107/S2059798317002996
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr D Struct Biol ISSN: 2059-7983 Impact factor: 7.652
Figure 1Instrumentation for fixed-target serial crystallography in situ on beamline I24 at Diamond Light Source. Retraction of both ‘standard’ goniometers leaves an empty sample environment, allowing the straightforward mounting of hardware for serial crystallography.
Data-collection parameters, scaling and refinement statistics
Statistics for the outermost resolution shell are shown in parentheses. Ramachandran statistics were determined using MolProbity (Chen et al., 2010 ▸).
| Chip 1 (SWMb-CO) | Chip 2 (SWMetMb) | |
|---|---|---|
| Data collection | ||
| Exposure time (ms) | 40 | 25 |
| Beam size (µm) | 20 × 20 | 9 × 8 |
| Wavelength (Å) | 0.9686 | 0.9686 |
| Incident flux (photons s−1) | 1.4 × 1012 | 3.2 × 1012 |
| Absorbed dose (kGy) | 51 | 426 |
| No. of integrated frames | 2576 | 4264 |
| No. of images used | 1776 | 3894 |
| Scaling | ||
| Space group |
|
|
| Unit-cell parameters (Å) |
|
|
| Resolution (Å) | 42.35–1.80 (1.83–1.80) | 39.76–1.70 (1.73–1.70) |
|
| 0.795 (0.926) | 0.761 (0.958) |
|
| 0.235 (0.663) | 0.148 (0.514) |
| CC1/2 | 93.57 (47.5) | 97.79 (58.87) |
| 〈 | 4.27 (0.36) | 1.65 (0.23) |
| Multiplicity | 25.3 (18.3) | 75.2 (56.43) |
| Completeness (%) | 100.0 (100.0) | 99.8 (99.3) |
| Refinement | ||
| No. of reflections | 14556 | 24300 |
| No. of non-H atoms | ||
| Protein | 1299 | 1246 |
| Water | 174 | 201 |
|
| 0.196/0.248 | 0.180/0.225 |
| R.m.s.d., bond lengths (Å) | 0.008 | 0.006 |
| R.m.s.d., bond angles (°) | 0.917 | 0.858 |
| Ramachandran plot | ||
| Most favoured (%) | 98.0 | 98.0 |
| Allowed (%) | 2.0 | 2.0 |
| PDB code |
|
|
Images were primarily rejected from the scaling step owing to crystal-to-crystal variation in the unit-cell parameters.
Figure 2Chip maps showing the spatial distribution of crystals across chips for chip 1 (a) and chip 2 (b). Apertures resulting in an image successfully indexed with DIALS are shown in white; empty or unindexed apertures are shown in dark red.
Figure 3OMIT electron-density maps obtained from SW-MetMb crystals mounted on chip 2. The maps are contoured at 1σ and show density in the region of the porphyrin ring. Composite OMIT maps were calculated using PHENIX (Terwilliger et al., 2008 ▸).