| Literature DB >> 32850967 |
Emma V Beale1, David G Waterman2,3, Corey Hecksel4, Jason van Rooyen4, James B Gilchrist4, James M Parkhurst1, Felix de Haas5, Bart Buijsse5, Gwyndaf Evans1, Peijun Zhang4,6,7.
Abstract
MicroED has recently emerged as a powerful method for the analysis of biological structures at atomic resolution. This technique has been largely limited to protein nanocrystals which grow either as needles or plates measuring only a few hundred nanometers in thickness. Furthermore, traditional microED data processing uses established X-ray crystallography software that is not optimized for handling compound effects that are unique to electron diffraction data. Here, we present an integrated workflow for microED, from sample preparation by cryo-focused ion beam milling, through data collection with a standard Ceta-D detector, to data processing using the DIALS software suite, thus enabling routine atomic structure determination of protein crystals of any size and shape using microED. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the workflow by determining the structure of proteinase K to 2.0 Å resolution and show the advantage of using protein crystal lamellae over nanocrystals.Entities:
Keywords: cryoEM; cryoFIB; crystallography; lamella; microED; nanocrystals; proteinase K
Year: 2020 PMID: 32850967 PMCID: PMC7417479 DOI: 10.3389/fmolb.2020.00179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Biosci ISSN: 2296-889X
FIGURE 3Fo vs. Fc plots for the proteinase K structures. The Fo vs. Fc plots for the nanocrystals (A) and lamella structures with 20 μm (B) and 50 μm (C) apertures describe the correlation between Fo and Fc for each dataset. The |Fe| value indicates the y-intercept of the curve fitted to these plots and is inset into the bottom right corner of each graph.
FIGURE 1Electron diffraction of proteinase K crystals with and without cryoFIB milling. (A) An electron micrograph of proteinase K nanocrystals. (B) A light micrograph of proteinase K microcrystals. (C,D) Representative SEM images of proteinase K microcrystals before (C) and after (D) cryoFIB milling. (E) An ion beam image of the lamella after the final milling step illustrates the thickness of the lamella after the final milling step (dashed white lines). (F) A cryoEM image of the resultant proteinase K lamella at low magnification. The white arrows in panels (C–F) indicate the same object of interest. (G,H) Electron diffraction patterns recorded from proteinase K nanocrystals (G) and from crystal lamella (H). The dotted circle represents the 2.0 Å resolution shell. The scale bars, 10 μm in A, 20 μm in B, 5 μm in C,D, 1 μm in E, and 10 μm in F.
Data processing, structure solution, and refinement statistics for data collected from nanocrystals and from lamella with either a 20 or a 50 μm condenser aperture.
| C2 aperture size (μm) | 20 | 20 | 50 |
| Data integration | |||
| Space group | |||
| 67.37, 106.78 | 67.33, 106.60 | 67.33, 106.88 | |
| α = β = γ (°) | 90.0 | 90.0 | 90.0 |
| Number of datasets | 8 | 4 | 2 |
| Number of crystals | 8 | 2 | 1 |
| Resolution (Å) | 2.7 | 2.4 | 2.0 |
| Rmeas | 0.532 (1.376) | 0.402 (1.323) | 0.332 (1.435) |
| Rpim | 0.140 (0.393) | 0.115 (0.374) | 0.104 (0.450) |
| ⟨ | 4.3 (1.8) | 5.2 (2.0) | 5.3 (1.8) |
| Completeness (%) | 88.5 (83.6) | 100.0 (99.7) | 93.0 (92.4) |
| Reflections | 78,458 (8010) | 121,087 (12723) | 139,242 (10,323) |
| Unique reflections | 6260 (573) | 10,176 (1035) | 15,787 (1139) |
| CC1/2 | 0.946 (0.498) | 0.987 (0.701) | 0.984 (0.611) |
| Structure solution | |||
| Translation-function | 41.4 | 50.5 | 59.3 |
| Log likelihood gain score | 2420.355 | 4201.608 | 6312.479 |
| Refinement | |||
| Reflections | 6182 | 10,107 | 15,758 |
| Reflections used for R-free | 297 | 495 | 792 |
| Resolution range | 56.97–2.70 (2.83–2.70) | 56.92–2.40 (2.49–2.40) | 56.97–2.00 (2.06–2.00) |
| R (%) | 20.92 | 17.75 | 19.40 |
| Rfree (%) | 24.82 | 21.59 | 22.68 |
| RMSD bonds | 0.002 | 0.003 | 0.002 |
| RMSD angles | 0.463 | 0.524 | 0.500 |
| ⟨B⟩ (Å2) | 7.30 | 18.31 | 16.44 |
| Ramachandran plot | |||
| Favored (%) | 97.10 | 96.74 | 97.11 |
| Allowed (%) | 2.54 | 3.26 | 2.53 |
| Outliers (%) | 0.36 | 0.00 | 0.36 |
| PDB entry | 6ZET | 6ZEV | 6ZEU |
FIGURE 2Overall model and example electrostatic potential maps for the proteinase K structures determined using electron diffraction data. (A) The models for the structures determined from nanocrystals (cyan) and the structures determined from lamella with the 20 μm (magenta) and 50 μm (green) condenser apertures are shown aligned by C-alpha residues in cartoon representation with the Ca2+ ion depicted as a sphere. (B–D) A section of the electrostatic potential maps around the disulfide bridge linking residues Cys34 and Cys123 is shown with the 2mFo – Fc maps contoured at 1.0 σ above the mean for the nancrystals (B), 20 μm C2 aperture lamella dataset (C) and the 50 μm C2 aperture lamella dataset (D).