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Published July 20, 2001 | public
Journal Article

Crystal structure of the 30 S ribosomal subunit from Thermus thermophilus: purification, crystallization and structure determination

Abstract

We describe the crystallization and structure determination of the 30 S ribosomal subunit from Thermus thermophilus. Previous reports of crystals that diffracted to 10 Å resolution were used as a starting point to improve the quality of the diffraction. Eventually, ideas such as the addition of substrates or factors to eliminate conformational heterogeneity proved less important than attention to detail in yielding crystals that diffracted beyond 3 Å resolution. Despite improvements in technology and methodology in the last decade, the structure determination of the 30 S subunit presented some very challenging technical problems because of the size of the asymmetric unit, crystal variability and sensitivity to radiation damage. Some steps that were useful for determination of the atomic structure were: the use of anomalous scattering from the LIII edges of osmium and lutetium to obtain the necessary phasing signal; the use of tunable, third-generation synchrotron sources to obtain data of reasonable quality at high resolution; collection of derivative data precisely about a mirror plane to preserve small anomalous differences between Bijvoet mates despite extensive radiation damage and multi-crystal scaling; the pre-screening of crystals to ensure quality, isomorphism and the efficient use of scarce third-generation synchrotron time; pre-incubation of crystals in cobalt hexaammine to ensure isomorphism with other derivatives; and finally, the placement of proteins whose structures had been previously solved in isolation, in conjunction with biochemical data on protein-RNA interactions, to map out the architecture of the 30 S subunit prior to the construction of a detailed atomic-resolution model.

Additional Information

© 2001 Academic Press. Received 16 February 2001, Revised 7 May 2001, Accepted 9 May 2001. This work was funded by the Medical Research Council (UK) and grant GM 44973 from the NIH (to S.W. White and V.R.). W.M.C. was the recipient of an NIH predoctoral fellowship, and D.E.B was supported by a postdoctoral fellowship from The Human Frontier Science Programme (HFSP). We thank M. Pope for a gift of the various tungsten clusters, G. Schneider and J. Löwe for tantalum bromide, and B.S. Brunschwig and M. Choi for synthesizing osmium hexaammine; A. Joachimiak, S. Ginell, R. Ravelli, S. McSweeney, G. Leonard, M. Capel, H. Lewis, L. Berman, M. Papiz, S. Girdwood and M. MacDonald for help and advice with synchrotron data collection; J. Löwe fpr advoce with density modification; M. Kjeldgaard and T.A. Jones for supplying O with RNA tools; and R.N. Dutnall for help with determining and optimizing the chromatographic conditions used. We also thank A.G.W. Leslie, R. Henderson, P.R. Evans and R.A. Crowther for helpful comments on the manuscript.

Additional details

Created:
August 21, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023