Journal Article PUBDB-2016-01028

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Macromolecular diffractive imaging using imperfect crystals

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2016
Nature Publ. Group London [u.a.]

Nature <London> 530(7589), 202 - 206 () [10.1038/nature16949]
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Abstract: The three-dimensional structures of macromolecules and their complexes are mainly elucidated by X-ray protein crystallography. A major limitation of this method is access to high-quality crystals, which is necessary to ensure X-ray diffraction extends to sufficiently large scattering angles and hence yields information of sufficiently high resolution with which to solve the crystal structure. The observation that crystals with reduced unit-cell volumes and tighter macromolecular packing often produce higher-resolution Bragg peaks suggests that crystallographic resolution for some macromolecules may be limited not by their heterogeneity, but by a deviation of strict positional ordering of the crystalline lattice. Such displacements of molecules from the ideal lattice give rise to a continuous diffraction pattern that is equal to the incoherent sum of diffraction from rigid individual molecular complexes aligned along several discrete crystallographic orientations and that, consequently, contains more information than Bragg peaks alone. Although such continuous diffraction patterns have long been observed—and are of interest as a source of information about the dynamics of proteins—they have not been used for structure determination. Here we show for crystals of the integral membrane protein complex photosystem II that lattice disorder increases the information content and the resolution of the diffraction pattern well beyond the 4.5 $\mathring{A}$ limit of measurable Bragg peaks, which allows us to phase the pattern directly. Using the molecular envelope conventionally determined at 4.5 $\mathring{A}$ as a constraint, we obtain a static image of the photosystem II dimer at a resolution of 3.5 $\mathring{A}$. This result shows that continuous diffraction can be used to overcome what have long been supposed to be the resolution limits of macromolecular crystallography, using a method that exploits commonly encountered imperfect crystals and enables model-free phasing.

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Note: (c) Macmillan Publishers Limited

Contributing Institute(s):
  1. CFEL-Coherent X-Ray Imaging (FS-CFEL-1)
Research Program(s):
  1. 6215 - Soft Matter, Health and Life Sciences (POF3-621) (POF3-621)
  2. AXSIS - Frontiers in Attosecond X-ray Science: Imaging and Spectroscopy (609920) (609920)
  3. NANOMEM - Membrane Protein Nanocrystallography (317079) (317079)
  4. VH-VI-419 - Dynamic Pathways in Multidimensional Landscapes (VH-VI-419) (VH-VI-419)
  5. 05E13GU1 - Entwicklung eines "Serial Femtosecond Crystallography (SFX)"-Messtandes am Europäischen Elektronenlaser XFEL (BMBF-05E13GU1) (BMBF-05E13GU1)
Experiment(s):
  1. Experiments at CFEL
  2. Measurement at external facility

Appears in the scientific report 2016
Database coverage:
Medline ; OpenAccess ; BIOSIS Previews ; Current Contents - Agriculture, Biology and Environmental Sciences ; Current Contents - Life Sciences ; Current Contents - Physical, Chemical and Earth Sciences ; IF >= 40 ; JCR ; NCBI Molecular Biology Database ; NationallizenzNationallizenz ; SCOPUS ; Science Citation Index ; Science Citation Index Expanded ; Thomson Reuters Master Journal List ; Web of Science Core Collection ; Zoological Record
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 Record created 2016-02-11, last modified 2025-07-30


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