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result(s) for
"Spence, John C. H."
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Time-resolved serial crystallography captures high-resolution intermediates of photoactive yellow protein
by
Weierstall, Uwe
,
James, Daniel
,
Fromme, Petra
in
Bacterial Proteins - chemistry
,
Bacterial Proteins - ultrastructure
,
BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
2014
Serial femtosecond crystallography using ultrashort pulses from x-ray free electron lasers (XFELs) enables studies of the light-triggered dynamics of biomolecuies. We used microcrystals of photoactive yellow protein (a bacterial blue light photoreceptor) as a model system and obtained high-resolution, time-resolved difference electron density maps of excellent quality with strong features; these allowed the determination of structures of reaction intermediates to a resolution of 1.6 angstroms. Our results open the way to the study of reversible and nonreversible biological reactions on time scales as short as femtoseconds under conditions that maximize the extent of reaction initiation throughout the crystal.
Journal Article
High-Resolution Electron Microscopy
by
Spence, John C. H
in
Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics
,
Electron microscopy
,
High resolution electron microscopy
2008,2010,2009
This book covers both practical and theoretical aspects of atomic resolution transmission electron microscopy. The discovery of the carbon nanotube, the three-dimensional imaging of the ribosome, and the imaging of a single foreign atom inside a thin crystal by energy-filtered transmission electron microscopy have all demonstrated the immense power of this technique. The recent development of aberration-correction devices has brought the spatial resolution of the method below one Angstrom. The emphasis throughout is on a clear presentation of fundamental concepts, and practical advice. The chapters review simple electron optics, phase contrast theory, coherence theory, and imaging theory for thin crystals. The multiple scattering theory is given in full, and the relationship between the various formulations (Bloch-wave, multislice, scattering matrix, Howie–Whelan equations, phase grating etc) is explained. Applications in biology and materials science are covered, with discussions of radiation damage, sample preparation, image processing and super-resolution, electron holography, and aberration correction. The theory of high-angle annular dark field Z-contrast imaging by scanning transmission electron microscopy is given in full. Additional chapters are devoted to electron sources and detectors, fault diagnosis, experimental methods and associated techniques such as channelling effects in X-ray microanalysis, microdiffraction, cathodoluminescence, environmental microscopy and electron energy-loss spectroscopy.
Outrunning damage: Electrons vs X-rays—timescales and mechanisms
2017
Toward the end of his career, Zewail developed strong interest in fast electron spectroscopy and
imaging, a field to which he made important contributions toward his aim of making
molecular movies free of radiation damage. We therefore compare here the atomistic
mechanisms leading to destruction of protein samples in diffract-and-destroy
experiments for the cases of high-energy electron beam irradiation and X-ray laser pulses. The damage
processes and their time-scales are compared and relevant elastic, inelastic, and
photoelectron cross sections are given. Inelastic mean-free paths for ejected electrons at
very low energies in insulators are compared with the bioparticle size. The dose rate and
structural damage rate for electrons are found to be much lower, allowing longer pulses,
reduced beam
current, and Coulomb interactions for the formation of smaller probes. High-angle
electron
scattering from the nucleus, which has no parallel in the X-ray case, tracks the slowly
moving nuclei during the explosion, just as the gain of the XFEL (X-ray free-electron laser) has
no parallel in the electron case. Despite reduced damage and much larger elastic
scattering cross sections in the electron case, leading to not
dissimilar elastic
scattering rates (when account is taken of the greatly increased
incident XFEL fluence), progress for single-particle electron diffraction is seen to
depend on the effort to reduce emittance growth due to Coulomb interactions, and so allow
formation of intense sub-micron beams no larger than a virus.
Journal Article
Massively parallel X-ray holography
by
Shapiro, David A.
,
Lee, Joanna Y.
,
Hau-Riege, Stefan P.
in
Applied and Technical Physics
,
Exact sciences and technology
,
Fourier transforms
2008
Advances in the development of free-electron lasers offer the realistic prospect of nanoscale imaging on the timescale of atomic motions. We identify X-ray Fourier-transform holography
1
,
2
,
3
as a promising but, so far, inefficient scheme to do this. We show that a uniformly redundant array
4
placed next to the sample, multiplies the efficiency of X-ray Fourier transform holography by more than three orders of magnitude, approaching that of a perfect lens, and provides holographic images with both amplitude- and phase-contrast information. The experiments reported here demonstrate this concept by imaging a nano-fabricated object at a synchrotron source, and a bacterial cell with a soft-X-ray free-electron laser, where illumination by a single 15-fs pulse was successfully used in producing the holographic image. As X-ray lasers move to shorter wavelengths we expect to obtain higher spatial resolution ultrafast movies of transient states of matter.
X-ray Fourier transform holography using free-electron lasers has the potential to enable nanoscale imaging on the timescale of atomic motion. A technique that dramatically increases the efficiency of this technique could move us a step towards such imaging.
Journal Article
Natively Inhibited Trypanosoma brucei Cathepsin B Structure Determined by Using an X-ray Laser
by
Weierstall, Uwe
,
White, Thomas A.
,
Caleman, Carl
in
Activation
,
Active sites
,
Amino Acid Sequence
2013
The Trypanosoma brucei cysteine protease cathepsin B (TbCatB), which is involved in host protein degradation, is a promising target to develop new treatments against sleeping sickness, a fatal disease caused by this protozoan parasite. The structure of the mature, active form of TbCatB has so far not provided sufficient information for the design of a safe and specific drug against T. brucei. By combining two recent innovations, in vivo crystallization and serial femtosecond crystallography, we obtained the room-temperature 2.1 angstrom resolution structure of the fully glycosylated precursor complex of TbCatB. The structure reveals the mechanism of native TbCatB inhibition and demonstrates that new biomolecular information can be obtained by the \"diffraction-before-destruction\" approach of x-ray free-electron lasers from hundreds of thousands of individual microcrystals.
Journal Article
Atomic structure of granulin determined from native nanocrystalline granulovirus using an X-ray free-electron laser
by
Weierstall, Uwe
,
White, Thomas A.
,
Fromme, Petra
in
60 APPLIED LIFE SCIENCES
,
Atoms & subatomic particles
,
BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
2017
To understand how molecules function in biological systems, new methods are required to obtain atomic resolution structures from biological material under physiological conditions. Intense femtosecond-duration pulses fromX-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs) can outrun most damage processes, vastly increasing the tolerable dose before the specimen is destroyed. This in turn allows structure determination from crystals much smaller and more radiation sensitive than previously considered possible, allowing data collection from room temperature structures and avoiding structural changes due to cooling. Regardless, high-resolution structures obtained from XFEL data mostly use crystals far larger than 1 μm³ in volume, whereas the X-ray beam is often attenuated to protect the detector from damage caused by intense Bragg spots. Here, we describe the 2 Å resolution structure of native nanocrystalline granulovirus occlusion bodies (OBs) that are less than 0.016 μm³ in volume using the full power of the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) and a dose up to 1.3 GGy per crystal. The crystalline shell of granulovirus OBs consists, on average, of about 9,000 unit cells, representing the smallest protein crystals to yield a high-resolution structure by X-ray crystallography to date. The XFEL structure shows little to no evidence of radiation damage and is more complete than a model determined using synchrotron data from recombinantly produced, much larger, cryocooled granulovirus granulin microcrystals. Our measurements suggest that it should be possible, under ideal experimental conditions, to obtain data from protein crystals with only 100 unit cells in volume using currently available XFELs and suggest that single-molecule imaging of individual biomolecules could almost be within reach.
Journal Article
Serial millisecond crystallography of membrane and soluble protein microcrystals using synchrotron radiation
by
Weierstall, Uwe
,
Cherezov, Vadim
,
James, Daniel
in
Advanced Photon Source
,
Crystallography
,
high-viscosity injector
2017
Crystal structure determination of biological macromolecules using the novel technique of serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX) is severely limited by the scarcity of X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) sources. However, recent and future upgrades render microfocus beamlines at synchrotron-radiation sources suitable for room-temperature serial crystallography data collection also. Owing to the longer exposure times that are needed at synchrotrons, serial data collection is termed serial millisecond crystallography (SMX). As a result, the number of SMX experiments is growing rapidly, with a dozen experiments reported so far. Here, the first high-viscosity injector-based SMX experiments carried out at a US synchrotron source, the Advanced Photon Source (APS), are reported. Microcrystals (5–20 µm) of a wide variety of proteins, including lysozyme, thaumatin, phycocyanin, the human A 2A adenosine receptor (A 2A AR), the soluble fragment of the membrane lipoprotein Flpp3 and proteinase K, were screened. Crystals suspended in lipidic cubic phase (LCP) or a high-molecular-weight poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO; molecular weight 8 000 000) were delivered to the beam using a high-viscosity injector. In-house data-reduction (hit-finding) software developed at APS as well as the SFX data-reduction and analysis software suites Cheetah and CrystFEL enabled efficient on-site SMX data monitoring, reduction and processing. Complete data sets were collected for A 2A AR, phycocyanin, Flpp3, proteinase K and lysozyme, and the structures of A 2A AR, phycocyanin, proteinase K and lysozyme were determined at 3.2, 3.1, 2.65 and 2.05 Å resolution, respectively. The data demonstrate the feasibility of serial millisecond crystallography from 5–20 µm crystals using a high-viscosity injector at APS. The resolution of the crystal structures obtained in this study was dictated by the current flux density and crystal size, but upcoming developments in beamline optics and the planned APS-U upgrade will increase the intensity by two orders of magnitude. These developments will enable structure determination from smaller and/or weakly diffracting microcrystals.
Journal Article
X-ray lasers and serial crystallography
2015
A summary is given of the achievements and opportunities which resulted from the first use of an X-ray laser for serial crystallography and related methods in 2009.A summary is given of the achievements and opportunities which resulted from the first use of an X-ray laser for serial crystallography and related methods in 2009.
Journal Article
Serial Crystallography: Preface
2020
The history of serial crystallography (SC) has its origins in the earliest attempts to merge data from several crystals. This preface provides an overview of some recent work, with a survey of the rapid advances made over the past decade in both sample delivery and data analysis.
Journal Article
Synchronous RNA conformational changes trigger ordered phase transitions in crystals
2021
Time-resolved studies of biomacromolecular crystals have been limited to systems involving only minute conformational changes within the same lattice. Ligand-induced changes greater than several angstroms, however, are likely to result in solid-solid phase transitions, which require a detailed understanding of the mechanistic interplay between conformational and lattice transitions. Here we report the synchronous behavior of the adenine riboswitch aptamer RNA in crystal during ligand-triggered isothermal phase transitions. Direct visualization using polarized video microscopy and atomic force microscopy shows that the RNA molecules undergo cooperative rearrangements that maintain lattice order, whose cell parameters change distinctly as a function of time. The bulk lattice order throughout the transition is further supported by time-resolved diffraction data from crystals using an X-ray free electron laser. The synchronous molecular rearrangements in crystal provide the physical basis for studying large conformational changes using time-resolved crystallography and micro/nanocrystals.
Time-resolved crystallography (TRX) is used for monitoring only small conformational changes of biomacromolecules within the same lattice. Here, the authors report the interplay between synchronous molecular rearrangements and lattice phase transitions in RNA crystals, providing the basis for the investigation of large conformational changes using TRX.
Journal Article