Title: Macromolecular Crystallography
1Macromolecular Crystallography
Marc SCHILTZ EPFL Laboratoire de
Cristallographie Cours BLOC 2006
- Bio-macromolecular crystallography
- solving structures of
- Proteins
- Nucleic acids (DNA, RNA)
- Large molecular assemblies (Viruses, Ribosome )
2Nucleic acids DNA
- information storage genetic information
3The structure of DNA
4Nucleic acids RNA
- Can do everything information storage
catalysis
Transfer RNA
Hammerhead RNA
5Proteins (I)
- Polymers of 20 amino acids
6Proteins (II)
- Adopt a well-defined 3D structure
Secondary structure elements
Alcohol Dehydrogenase
7Proteins (III)
- The folding mystery 3D structure is coded
by 1D sequence
8Proteins (IV)
- Proteins are bio-catalysts (enzymes) they
control almost every chemical process in living
organisms
- The 3D structure defines the biological
function
Alcohol Dehydrogenase Active (catalytic) site
9Structure-based drug design
HIV protease complexed with Xv638 Of Dupont
Pharmaceuticals
10Myoglobin Hemoglobin
11Steps to solve a macromolecular structure by
X-ray crystallography
12What makes protein crystallography different ?
The crystals
- Difficult to obtain
- Trial and error approach
- Need a high degree of purity and rather large
quantities of proteins - Contain large amounts (3080) of disordered
water - Peculiar state of mater (gel-like)
- Rapidly dehydrate in free air
- Are mechanically fragile and sensitive to X-rays
- Are rarely of the same diffraction quality as
small-molecule crystals
13What makes protein crystallography different ?
X-ray data collection
- Problems
- Large unit cells (cell dimensions 50500 Ã…)
- Very large number of reflections
(10.0001.000.000) - Weak intensities
- Fast deterioration of the crystals in the X-ray
beam - Goals
- Fast X-ray data collection with good signal/noise
- High incident beam intensity
- Avoid spatial overlapping of diffraction spots
- Slow-down the radiation damage
- Solutions
- Rotation method with area detectors
- Synchrotron radiation
- Cryo-cooling of crystals
14What makes protein crystallography different ?
X-ray data collection
15What makes protein crystallography different ?
The phase problem
- Direct methods (ab initio methods)
- Are not successful except in special cases
- Usually not enough data at high angles (high
resolution) - The basic hypothesis of a uniform distribution of
atoms in the crystal unit cell is unrealistic - Search methods (molecular replacement)
- Need a good enough model (a closely related
structure) - Numerically challenging (3 rotations 3
translations) - Physical methods (de novo methods)
- Isomorphous replacement labeling with heavy
atoms - Anomalous (resonant) scattering
16Phasing physical methods
No wonder we lose the phase if there is nothing
to compare with it ! Let us see what happens if
we add a standard to it, a coherent background.
() The interference of the object wave and of
the coherent background or reference wave will
then produce interference fringes. There will be
maxima wherever the phases of the two waves were
identical. (Gabor, 1972)
17Isomorphous replacement (I)
If FH is known, and IP IPH have been measured,
the phase jP can be determined up to a twofold
ambiguity.
18Isomorphous replacement (II)
- Reality is less bright
- FPH FP FH Non-Isomorphism
- Measurement errors on IP and IPH
- FH may not be known very accurately
- Phase probability distributions
Im
Re
FPH FP FH
19Anomalous Scattering (I)
20Anomalous Scattering (II)
21Electron density map model building
22Outlook
- Tremendous technical and methodological
progresses have been achieved - Molecular biology genetic engineering
technologies - Area detectors Synchrotron radiation
- Cryo-cooling of crystals
- Anomalous diffraction Se-incorporation
- Theoretical developments in phasing methods
- Numerical methods Computing power
- Sample preparation and crystallization remain
bottlenecks - The future
- Structural genomics proteomics
- Membrane proteins
- Eucaryotic systems
- Methodolgical challenges
- Crystalization, crystallization,
crystallization.. more physical chemistry ! - Time-resolved diffraction
- Diffraction on micro-crystals
- Protein powder diffraction
23Myoglobin Hemoglobin
24Heamoglobin
25- Deoxyhaemoglobin
- Heam group is doomed
- Iron is out-of-plane
- High-spin state
- Oxyhaemoglobin
- Heam group is planar
- Iron is in-plane
- Low-spin state
26Small changes translate to large movements
27Small changes translate to large movements
28Virus structures
Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV)
29The structure of AdenovirusElectron microscopy
X-ray crystallography
Combining EM image reconstruction and X-ray
crystal structures of coat proteins
30Photosynthetic reaction centre