| Literature DB >> 28876237 |
M T B Clabbers1, E van Genderen2, W Wan3, E L Wiegers4, T Gruene2, J P Abrahams1.
Abstract
Three-dimensional nanometre-sized crystals of macromolecules currently resist structure elucidation by single-crystal X-ray crystallography. Here, a single nanocrystal with a diffracting volume of only 0.14 µm3, i.e. no more than 6 × 105 unit cells, provided sufficient information to determine the structure of a rare dimeric polymorph of hen egg-white lysozyme by electron crystallography. This is at least an order of magnitude smaller than was previously possible. The molecular-replacement solution, based on a monomeric polyalanine model, provided sufficient phasing power to show side-chain density, and automated model building was used to reconstruct the side chains. Diffraction data were acquired using the rotation method with parallel beam diffraction on a Titan Krios transmission electron microscope equipped with a novel in-house-designed 1024 × 1024 pixel Timepix hybrid pixel detector for low-dose diffraction data collection. Favourable detector characteristics include the ability to accurately discriminate single high-energy electrons from X-rays and count them, fast readout to finely sample reciprocal space and a high dynamic range. This work, together with other recent milestones, suggests that electron crystallography can provide an attractive alternative in determining biological structures.Entities:
Keywords: electron crystallography; hybrid pixel detector; protein nanocrystals
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28876237 PMCID: PMC5586247 DOI: 10.1107/S2059798317010348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr D Struct Biol ISSN: 2059-7983 Impact factor: 7.652
Figure 1The flange design of the camera housing, including the Timepix hybrid pixel detector in the centre (Supplementary Fig. S1). The tiled detector assembly holds four Timepix quads (512 × 512 pixels each). The dark grey top layers pointed out by the arrows represent the sensitive silicon layers of a pair of Timepix quads and the light grey slabs below represent the chip board. The gaps between the chips are necessary to accommodate the wire bonds to the readout boards.
Figure 2Electron diffraction data acquisition. (a) Measured powder pattern of an aluminium diffraction standard after correcting for the tiling offsets of the Timepix quad ASICs. An elliptical distortion can be observed with a deviation of 1.043 (= A/B) at an angle of φ = 21.3°. Diffraction from the single lysozyme crystal summed over 1.0° of rotation (b) from −17.0° to −16.0° and (c) from −6.0 to −5.0°. Crosses on individual quads are owing to corrections for larger border pixels as described by Nederlof et al. (2013 ▸) and van Genderen et al. (2016 ▸); these pixels were not taken into account for processing of the protein diffraction data. Note that owing to the radiation hardness of the detector, no backstop was required. Resolution rings were plotted with ADXV (http://www.scripps.edu/tainer/arvai/adxv.html). (d) A typical spot profile of a high-intensity peak at 16.33 Å resolution recorded on a single frame with an angular increment of 0.076° per frame at a dose rate of ∼0.01 e− Å−2 per frame, shown in a 10 × 10 pixel array with 0.055 × 0.055 mm pixel size.
Figure 3Micrographs of a single three-dimensional lysozyme crystal (200 × 500 × 1400 nm) in a thin layer of vitreous ice across a hole in the Lacey carbon EM grid at (a) +20° tilt angle and (b) +50° tilt angle. Diffraction data were acquired with a 2.0 µm diameter parallel beam in microprobe mode, indicated by a circle in (a). During data collection only the tip of the crystal was kept in the central beam to limit noise from the carbon support. The width of the crystal at both tilt angles was used to derive its dimensions; the length was measured from the tip of the crystal to the edge of the carbon and was the maximum size of the crystal within the central beam at any point during rotation.
Data integration and refinement statistics
Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell; the data were truncated at I/σ(I) > 1.0 (Diederichs & Karplus, 2013 ▸).
| Single crystal (PDB entry | Merged data (PDB entry | |
|---|---|---|
| Data integration | ||
| Space group |
| |
|
| 104.56, 68.05, 32.05 | |
| α, β, γ (°) | 90.0, 90.0, 90.0 | |
| No. of crystals | 1 | 7 |
| Resolution (Å) | 41.46–2.11 (2.17–2.11) | 57.03–2.11 (2.17–2.11) |
|
| 26.3 (56.6) | 39.8 (64.0) |
| 〈 | 2.6 (1.0) | 2.7 (1.0) |
| Completeness (%) | 49.5 (49.8) | 61.7 (49.8) |
| Reflections | 12601 (1462) | 41191 (1462) |
| Unique reflections | 6749 (545) | 8560 (545) |
| Structure solution | ||
| Translation-function | 22.5 | 26.7 |
| LLG score | 395 | 535 |
| Refinement | ||
| Reflections | 6717 | 8503 |
|
| 33.5 | 26.4 |
|
| 35.0 | 27.9 |
| 〈 | 24.0 | 27.0 |
| R.m.s. | 0.92 | 0.85 |
| R.m.s. | 1.27 | 0.97 |
| Ramachandran plot | ||
| Favoured (%) | 93.7 | 98.4 |
| Allowed (%) | 5.9 | 1.6 |
| Outliers (%) | 0.4 | 0.0 |
Data-integration statistics for the individual crystals used for merging are shown in Supplementary Table S1; data-merging statistics are presented in Supplementary Fig. S2 and Supplementary Table S4.
We present R1 and R complete instead of R work and R free. For less than 10 000 unique reflections R complete is preferred over R free, since it is calculated from all reflections (Brünger, 1997 ▸; Luebben & Gruene, 2015 ▸). Since all structure factors are used, this in turn leads to a more robust calculation than R free. Using this validation method, the actual refinement uses all reflections; hence, R work is equivalent to R1.
Relative crystal volume used for structure determination in recent macromolecular electron diffraction studies
| PDB code | Detector |
| Space group | Unit-cell dimensions (Å) | No. of crystals | Individual crystal size (µm) and total diffracted volume | No. of unit cells | Relative unique diffracted intensity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lysozyme |
| Hybrid pixel | 2.1 |
| 105 × 68 × 32 | 1 | 0.2 × 0.5 × 1.4 (0.14 µm3) | 0.6 | 1.4 |
| Lysozyme (Nannenga, Shi, Leslie |
| CMOS | 2.5 |
| 76 × 76 × 37 | 1 | 0.5 × 2.0 × 2.0 (2 µm3) | 9.4 | 18 |
| Catalase (Nannenga, Shi, Hattne |
| CMOS | 3.2 |
| 68 × 172 × 182 | 1 | 0.15 × 4.0 × 6.0 (3.6 µm3) | 1.7 | 14 |
| Catalase (Yonekura |
| CCD | 3.2 |
| 69 × 173 × 206 | 58 | 0.1 × 2.0 × 2.0 (23 µm3) | 9.4 | 77 |
| Ca2+-ATPase (Yonekura |
| CCD | 3.4 |
| 166 × 64 × 147 (β = 98°) | 99 | 0.1 × 2.0 × 2.0 (40 µm3) | 25 | 490 |
The illuminated crystal size used for data acquisition is estimated from the reported crystal dimensions and the aperture sizes used; for the structures with PDB codes 3j7u and 3j7t (Yonekura et al., 2015 ▸) we assumed that the plate-like crystals had a surface area of 2 × 2 µm. The total diffracted volume (indicated by the number in parentheses) takes the number of crystals required for the three-dimensional data set into account.
The required number of unit cells was calculated by dividing the total diffracted volume by the unit-cell volume.
We calculated the relative unique diffracted intensity by dividing the number of required unit cells (given in the previous column) by the number of asymmetric units in the unit cell and multiplying the result by the cube of the resolution of the data set.
Figure 4Differences in intensities of Friedel pairs after scaling plotted for (a) a single lysozyme crystal used for structure solution with R Friedel = 0.329 and (b) X-ray data for hormaomycin, a macrocyclic depsipeptide in space group P1 with R Friedel = 0.151 (Gruene et al., 2014 ▸).
Figure 5Automated model building using the single-crystal data. After molecular replacement with the polyalanine monomer (yellow C atoms), the difference map shows the position of bulky side-chain residues such as (a) Trp28 as placed during autobuilding by Buccaneer (turquoise C atoms) and (b) Tyr20 and Arg21. The map is stretched, which is typical for incomplete data; as always with poor map quality, careful interpretation of the region is required. The map improves after side-chain reconstruction with Buccaneer and refinement with REFMAC5. (c) The refined density suggests that Ala9 (yellow C atoms) is a cis-peptide; it is confirmed by the X-ray structure of the same polymorph (turquoise C atoms; PDB entry 4r0f) that the peptide is cis. Refinement using standard protocols can further improve the map and shows continuous density (d) for a Trp108 side-chain residue in chain A of the single-crystal model. All density is shown at a standard contour level of 1.2σ.
Figure 6F o versus F c graphs for (a) electron diffraction of a single lysozyme nanocrystal and (b) an X-ray data set for cubic (bovine) insulin at 1.6 Å resolution. The data were least-squares fitted with a hyperbolic function described by 〈|F o|〉 = [|F c|2 + 〈|E(h)|〉2]1/2. F o versus F c graphs for only the low-resolution part of the single-crystal data and for the merged crystal data are shown in Supplementary Fig. S6.