| Literature DB >> 31098026 |
Raphaël de Wijn1, Oliver Hennig2, Jennifer Roche3, Sylvain Engilberge4, Kevin Rollet1, Pablo Fernandez-Millan1, Karl Brillet1, Heike Betat2, Mario Mörl2, Alain Roussel3, Eric Girard4, Christoph Mueller-Dieckmann5, Gavin C Fox6, Vincent Olieric7, José A Gavira8, Bernard Lorber1, Claude Sauter1.
Abstract
Determining optimal conditions for the production of well diffracting crystals is a key step in every biocrystallography project. Here, a microfluidic device is described that enables the production of crystals by counter-diffusion and their direct on-chip analysis by serial crystallography at room temperature. Nine 'non-model' and diverse biomacromolecules, including seven soluble proteins, a membrane protein and an RNA duplex, were crystallized and treated on-chip with a variety of standard techniques including micro-seeding, crystal soaking with ligands and crystal detection by fluorescence. Furthermore, the crystal structures of four proteins and an RNA were determined based on serial data collected on four synchrotron beamlines, demonstrating the general applicability of this multipurpose chip concept.Entities:
Keywords: ChipX3; counter-diffusion; crystallization; ligand soaking; macromolecule; microfluidics; protein structure; room temperature; seeding; serial crystallography; trace fluorescent labeling
Year: 2019 PMID: 31098026 PMCID: PMC6503916 DOI: 10.1107/S2052252519003622
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IUCrJ ISSN: 2052-2525 Impact factor: 4.769
Biomolecules and crystallization conditions
| Biological source | No. of residues/molecular mass (kDa) | Biomolecule concentration (mg ml−1) | Biomolecule buffer solution | Crystallant solution | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CCA-adding enzyme |
| 420/48.5 | 5.5 | 50 m | 30%( |
| Nanobody 02 | Llama | 129/14.5 | 13.8 | 10 m | 20%( |
| Protease 1 |
| 6 × 166/111.6 | 7.4 | 20 m | 3.4 |
| Lipase |
| 269/29.3 | 30 | 25 m | 0.3 |
| Aspartyl-tRNA synthetase 1 |
| 2 × 580/132 | 19 | 50 m | 10%( |
| Mitochondrial aspartyl-tRNA synthetase |
| 2 × 630/140 | 30 | 50 m | 100 m |
| OMT ShuA |
| 632/69.5 | 20 | 10 m | 0.1 |
| RNA duplex | Synthetic | 2 × 9/5.8 | 10 | 10 m | 2.6 |
| Hemoglobin |
| 574/62 | 20 | 50 m | 3.3 |
Figure 1ChipX3 setup. (a) Schematic view of the chip, which has the dimensions of a microscope slide (75 × 25 mm) and eight channels with a straight segment of 4 cm and a cross-section of 80 × 80 µm. Close-up views are shown of (b) the inlet for the biomacromolecule solution, (c) the channels and labels, and (d) the end of the channel and the crystallant reservoir.
Data-collection and refinement statistics
Values in parentheses correspond to the high resolution range.
| CCA-adding enzyme | CCA-adding enzyme + CMPcPP | Nanobody 02 | Protease 1 | Lipase | RNA duplex | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| X-ray beamline | PXIII, SLS | PXII, SLS | PX2A, SOLEIL | PXIII, SLS | ID30B, ESRF | PXIII, SLS |
| Wavelength (Å) | 1.000 | 1.000 | 0.826 | 1.240 | 0.976 | 0.826 |
| Temperature (K) | 293 | 293 | 293 | 293 | 293 | 293 |
| Detector | PILATUS 2M-F | PILATUS 6M | EIGER | PILATUS 2M-F | PILATUS3 6M | MAR CCD |
| Crystal-to-detector distance (mm) | 300 | 400 | 154 | 150/200 | 502 | 200 |
| Crystals collected | 6 | 14 | 9 | 1/11 | 14 | 3 |
| Crystals selected | 5 | 5 | 1 | 8 | 2 | 3 |
| Rotation range per image (°) | 0.1 | 0.2 | 0.1 | 0.2 | 0.1 | 2–3 |
| No. of images selected | 1000 | 540 | 500 | 1300 | 600 | 80 |
| Total rotation range (°) | 100 | 108 | 50 | 260 | 60 | 155 |
| Exposure time per image (s) | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.1 | 0.02 | 1–2 |
| Space group |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 71.5, 293.8 | 71.4, 293.6 | 66.7, 91.8 | 125.6, 133.9 | 142.6, 80.7 | 40.0, 69.1 |
| Solvent content (%) | 68.3 | 67.8 | 65.0 | 74.0 | 68.6 | 54.7 |
| Mean mosaicity (°) | 0.04 | 0.04 | 0.07 | 0.04 | 0.03 | 0.15 |
| Resolution range (Å) | 46–2.54 (2.60–2.54) | 48–2.30 (2.40–2.30) | 50–2.10 (2.18–2.10) | 50–2.15 (2.21–2.15) | 49.06–2.50 (2.60–2.50) | 23–1.55 (1.59–1.55) |
| Total No. of reflections | 176105 (9374) | 232642 (32937) | 45307 (4574) | 1095436 (85346) | 102820 (11312) | 21681 (605) |
| No. of unique reflections | 23922 (1598) | 34862 (4066) | 12281 (1196) | 57690 (4522) | 31982 (3668) | 5485 (304) |
| Completeness (%) | 90.6 (84.6) | 99.5 (100.0) | 97.2 (98.3) | 98.5 (99.6) | 98.5 (98.9) | 91.5 (69.7) |
| Multiplicity | 7.5 (6.0) | 6.7 (8.1) | 3.7 (3.8) | 19.0 (18.9) | 3.2 (3.1) | 3.9 (2.0) |
| 〈 | 8.1 (1.3) | 6.9 (0.7) | 11.3 (1.8) | 12.0 (1.4) | 6.3 (0.8) | 6.1 (1.8) |
|
| 18.9 (126.0) | 18.0 (231.2) | 7.5 (84.7) | 17.4 (206.4) | 8.6 (86.8) | 17.9 (45.6) |
| CC1/2 (%) | 98.7 (55.0) | 98.7 (46.9) | 99.7 (73.5) | 99.7 (69.4) | 99.4 (49.4) | 98.8 (75.5) |
|
| 57.4 | 60.6 | 45.2 | 50.8 | 63.3 | 23.6 |
| Reflections in working/test sets | 23583/1180 | 34840/3405 | 11053/1228 | 57659/5758 | 31516/1573 | 5484/382 |
| Final | 18.8/21.4 | 20.0/22.9 | 16.9/21.1 | 16.2/18.4 | 17.2/19.9 | 19.2/22.3 |
| No. of non-H atoms | ||||||
| Total | 2998 | 3028 | 970 | 4017 | 4446 | 390 |
| Protein | 2989 | 2989 | 947 | 3921 | 4404 | 342 |
| Solvent | 9 | 10 | 23 | 96 | 47 | 43 |
| Ligand | 0 | 29 | 0 | 0 | 33 | 0 |
| Ion | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 5 |
| R.m.s.d., bonds (Å) | 0.009 | 0.010 | 0.008 | 0.012 | 0.004 | 0.004 |
| R.m.s.d., angles (°) | 1.23 | 1.22 | 0.897 | 1.43 | 1.08 | 0.680 |
| Average | ||||||
| Overall | 60.1 | 62.6 | 53.8 | 57.1 | 83.8 | 17.8 |
| Biomolecule | 60.1 | 60.1 | 53.8 | 57.1 | 82.9 | 17.6 |
| Solvent | 52.7 | 55.5 | 50.9 | 56.1 | 62.6 | 15.1 |
| Ramachandran plot regions (%) | ||||||
| Most favored | 98.1 | 97.2 | 95.8 | 98.4 | 96.6 | |
| Allowed | 1.9 | 2.8 | 4.2 | 1.6 | 3.2 | |
| PDB code |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| PDB code at 100 K |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| R.m.s. distance (Å2)/Δ | 0.79/5.0 | 0.83/3.8 | 0.79/6.6 | 0.47/4.3 | 1.0/3.9 | 0.40/2.7 |
Structures solved at room temperature (this work) are compared with equivalent structures determined at cryogenic temperatures (100 K). R.m.s. distances are calculated taking into account all biomolecule atoms and ΔV c quantifies the increase in the unit-cell volume (V c) at room temperature.
Figure 2Examples of crystals obtained in ChipX3. Crystals were grown as described in Table 1 ▸. (a) CCA, (b) PhP1, (c, d) Nb02 before (c) and after (d) data collection, with the X-ray beam footprint, (e) lipase, (f) ttDRS, (g) hmDRS, (h) OMT ShuA, (i) oligo RNA duplex and (j) hemoglobin. The scale bar is 0.1 mm in length.
Figure 3Crystal detection in ChipX3 by fluorescence. (a, b) CCA crystals grown as described in Table 1 ▸ with 0.6% CCA-TFL; (c, d) PhP1 crystals grown as described in Table 1 ▸ with 10 mM Tb-Xo4. (a, c) Crystals illuminated with white light. (b) Crystal illuminated with a 520 nm light source and image taken with a low-pass filter at 550 nm (LP550); inset, structure of carboxyrhodamine-succinimidyl ester. (d) Crystal illuminated with a 280–380 nm UV source; inset, structure of Tb-Xo4. The scale bar is 0.1 mm in length.
Figure 4Crystals before and after soaking in ChipX3. Images of CCA crystals grown as described in Table 1 ▸ with 0.6% CCA-TFL. (a, b) Before soaking. (c, d) Images taken six days after soaking with CMPcPP at a final concentration of 3.75 mM. (a, c) White-light illumination. (b, d) Images taken with a 520 nm light source and a low-pass filter at 550 nm (LP550). The scale bar is 0.1 mm in length.
Figure 5Diffraction analysis in ChipX3. (a) ChipX3 on its holder. (b) ChipX3 on beamline PXIII at the SLS synchrotron. (c) Example of a diffraction pattern of the CCA adding-enzyme in ChipX3 at room temperature (exposure 0.1 s, rotation 0.2°).
Figure 6Electron-density maps and structures of target macromolecules. (a) CCA-adding enzyme with the positive density from the ligand, (b) nanobody, (c) protease 1, (d) lipase, (e) RNA duplex. Insets: schematic representations of the whole macromolecules. This figure was prepared using PyMOL (v1.8.6; Schrödinger) with 2F o − F c electron-density maps (in blue) contoured at 1.2σ and the difference map (in green) contoured at 4σ.