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Published May 2021 | Published + Supplemental Material + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Challenges in solving structures from radiation-damaged tomograms of protein nanocrystals assessed by simulation

Abstract

Structure-determination methods are needed to resolve the atomic details that underlie protein function. X-ray crystallography has provided most of our knowledge of protein structure, but is constrained by the need for large, well ordered crystals and the loss of phase information. The rapidly developing methods of serial femtosecond crystallography, micro-electron diffraction and single-particle reconstruction circumvent the first of these limitations by enabling data collection from nanocrystals or purified proteins. However, the first two methods also suffer from the phase problem, while many proteins fall below the molecular-weight threshold required for single-particle reconstruction. Cryo-electron tomography of protein nanocrystals has the potential to overcome these obstacles of mainstream structure-determination methods. Here, a data-processing scheme is presented that combines routines from X-ray crystallography and new algorithms that have been developed to solve structures from tomograms of nanocrystals. This pipeline handles image-processing challenges specific to tomographic sampling of periodic specimens and is validated using simulated crystals. The tolerance of this workflow to the effects of radiation damage is also assessed. The simulations indicate a trade-off between a wider tilt range to facilitate merging data from multiple tomograms and a smaller tilt increment to improve phase accuracy. Since phase errors, but not merging errors, can be overcome with additional data sets, these results recommend distributing the dose over a wide angular range rather than using a finer sampling interval to solve the protein structure.

Additional Information

© 2021 International Union of Crystallography. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited. Received 19 September 2020; Accepted 2 March 2021. We thank Lauren Ann Metskas and Florian Schur for valuable discussions, in addition to David Stokes and Steven Ludtke for advice on the phase-splitting phenomenon. AP is The Mark Foundation for Cancer Research Fellow of the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation (DRG 2361-19). This work was supported by NIH grants R35 GM122588 (to GJJ), AI150464 (to GJJ) and GM117126 (to NKS). Code availability: The code developed to process tomograms of nanocrystals is available at https://github.com/apeck12/cryoetX.

Attached Files

Published - S2059798321002369.pdf

Submitted - 2020.09.18.298562v1.full.pdf

Supplemental Material - qh5069sup1.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
December 22, 2023