| Literature DB >> 34981768 |
Benjamin Basanta1, Marscha M Hirschi1, Danielle A Grotjahn1, Gabriel C Lander1.
Abstract
Buffer-composition and sample-preparation guidelines for cryo-electron microscopy are geared towards maximizing imaging contrast and reducing electron-beam-induced motion. These pursuits often involve the minimization or the complete removal of additives that are commonly used to facilitate proper protein folding and minimize aggregation. Among these admonished additives is glycerol, a widely used osmolyte that aids protein stability. In this work, it is shown that the inclusion of glycerol does not preclude high-resolution structure determination by cryoEM, as demonstrated by an ∼2.3 Å resolution reconstruction of mouse apoferritin (∼500 kDa) and an ∼3.3 Å resolution reconstruction of rabbit muscle aldolase (∼160 kDa) in the presence of 20%(v/v) glycerol. While it was found that generating thin ice that is amenable to high-resolution imaging requires long blot times, the addition of glycerol did not result in increased beam-induced motion or an inability to pick particles. Overall, these findings indicate that glycerol should not be discounted as a cryoEM sample-buffer additive, particularly for large, fragile complexes that are prone to disassembly or aggregation upon its removal. open access.Entities:
Keywords: aldolase; apoferritin; cryoEM; glycerol; sample buffer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34981768 PMCID: PMC8725161 DOI: 10.1107/S2059798321012110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Crystallogr D Struct Biol ISSN: 2059-7983 Impact factor: 7.652
Figure 1Apoferritin reconstructions acquired at 200 keV in the presence of 1.7% and 20% glycerol. (a) Fourier shell correlation (FSC) between masked half maps (blue line) and between phase-randomized half maps (black line) from the apoferritin reconstruction in the presence of 20% glycerol. The gray line shows the gold-standard (0.143) correlation value. (b) Reconstruction of apoferritin in the presence of 20% glycerol, colored by local resolution. The right half of the image is a cutaway showing the interior. (c) Apoferritin model (PDB entry 6v21) fitted into the EM density from reconstructions in 20% (blue) and 1.7% (green) glycerol. (d) B-factor plot (Rosenthal & Henderson, 2003 ▸) showing the improvement of resolution as a function of the number of particles used for reconstruction in the presence and absence of a high glycerol concentration. (e) Accrued beam-induced motion (per-frame summation) as a function of the number of electrons per Å2 received by the sample. Solid lines: average over all collected movies at a given dose. Colored shades: standard deviation over all movies at a given dose.
Figure 2Cryo-electron tomography of apoferritin samples acquired in the presence of 1.7% and 20% glycerol. (a) Electron micrographs from sample screening manually blotted for different times. (b) Exemplar micrographs of samples with 1.7% and 20% glycerol. (c) Ice-thickness measurements obtained by electron tomography. Data points are shown as colored dots (horizontally stacked only to aid clarity) overlaid on a gray box that spans the two central quartiles and is crossed by a vertical line at the median. The whiskers span the range of data between the 5th and 95th percentiles. (d) 3D renderings of ice cross-sections from representative micrographs in samples with and without added glycerol, generated by matching an apoferritin density template on the aligned tomograms and placing oriented density surface renderings as markers at high cross-correlation locations.
Figure 3Reconstruction of aldolase at 300 keV in the presence of 20% glycerol. (a) Fourier shell correlation between masked half maps (blue line) and between phase-randomized half maps (black line) from the aldolase density reconstruction in the presence of 20% glycerol. The gray line shows the 0.143 gold-standard correlation value. (b) Density reconstruction of aldolase from data acquired in the presence of 20% glycerol, colored by local resolution. (c) Enlarged segments of aldolase density reconstruction from two areas with different local resolution. PDB entry 5vy5 was aligned with the density and the corresponding atoms are shown inside the mesh.