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Open Access
Abstract: Research towards using X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) data to solve structures using experimental phasing methods such as sulfur single-wavelength anomalous dispersion (SAD) has been hampered by shortcomings in the diffraction models for X-ray diffraction from FELs. Owing to errors in the orientation matrix and overly simple partiality models, researchers have required large numbers of images to converge to reliable estimates for the structure-factor amplitudes, which may not be feasible for all biological systems. Here, data for cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus type 17 (CPV17) collected at 1.3 Å wavelength at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) are revisited. A previously published definition of a partiality model for reflections illuminated by self-amplified spontaneous emission (SASE) pulses is built upon, which defines a fraction between 0 and 1 based on the intersection of a reflection with a spread of Ewald spheres modelled by a super-Gaussian wavelength distribution in the X-ray beam. A method of post-refinement to refine the parameters of this model is suggested. This has generated a merged data set with an overall discrepancy (by calculating the Rsplit value) of 3.15% to 1.46 Å resolution from a 7225-image data set. The atomic numbers of C, N and O atoms in the structure are distinguishable in the electron-density map. There are 13 S atoms within the 237 residues of CPV17, excluding the initial disordered methionine. These only possess 0.42 anomalous scattering electrons each at 1.3 Å wavelength, but the 12 that have single predominant positions are easily detectable in the anomalous difference Fourier map. It is hoped that these improvements will lead towards XFEL experimental phase determination and structure determination by sulfur SAD and will generally increase the utility of the method for difficult cases.
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Jun 2015
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Mark
Könnecke
,
Frederick A.
Akeroyd
,
Herbert J.
Bernstein
,
Aaron S.
Brewster
,
Stuart
Campbell
,
Björn
Clausen
,
Stephen
Cottrell
,
Jens Uwe
Hoffmann
,
Pete R.
Jemian
,
David
Männicke
,
Raymond
Osborn
,
Peter F.
Peterson
,
Tobias
Richter
,
Jiro
Suzuki
,
Benjamin
Watts
,
Eugen
Wintersberger
,
Joachim
Wuttke
Open Access
Abstract: NeXus is an effort by an international group of scientists to define a common data exchange and archival format for neutron, X-ray and muon experiments. NeXus is built on top of the scientific data format HDF5 and adds domain-specific rules for organizing data within HDF5 files, in addition to a dictionary of well defined domain-specific field names. The NeXus data format has two purposes. First, it defines a format that can serve as a container for all relevant data associated with a beamline. This is a very important use case. Second, it defines standards in the form of application definitions for the exchange of data between applications. NeXus provides structures for raw experimental data as well as for processed data.
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Feb 2015
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Iris D.
Young
,
Mohamed
Ibrahim
,
Ruchira
Chatterjee
,
Sheraz
Gul
,
Franklin D.
Fuller
,
Sergey
Koroidov
,
Aaron S.
Brewster
,
Rosalie
Tran
,
Roberto
Alonso-mori
,
Thomas
Kroll
,
Tara
Michels-clark
,
Hartawan
Laksmono
,
Raymond G.
Sierra
,
Claudiu A.
Stan
,
Rana
Hussein
,
Miao
Zhang
,
Lacey
Douthit
,
Markus
Kubin
,
Casper
De Lichtenberg
,
Long
Vo Pham
,
Håkan
Nilsson
,
Mun Hon
Cheah
,
Dmitriy
Shevela
,
Claudio
Saracini
,
Mackenzie A.
Bean
,
Ina
Seuffert
,
Dimosthenis
Sokaras
,
Tsu-chien
Weng
,
Ernest
Pastor
,
Clemens
Weninger
,
Thomas
Fransson
,
Louise
Lassalle
,
Philipp
Bräuer
,
Pierre
Aller
,
Peter T.
Docker
,
Babak
Andi
,
Allen M.
Orville
,
James M.
Glownia
,
Silke
Nelson
,
Marcin
Sikorski
,
Diling
Zhu
,
Mark S.
Hunter
,
Thomas J.
Lane
,
Andy
Aquila
,
Jason E.
Koglin
,
Joseph
Robinson
,
Mengning
Liang
,
Sébastien
Boutet
,
Artem Y.
Lyubimov
,
Monarin
Uervirojnangkoorn
,
Nigel W.
Moriarty
,
Dorothee
Liebschner
,
Pavel V.
Afonine
,
David G.
Waterman
,
Gwyndaf
Evans
,
Philippe
Wernet
,
Holger
Dobbek
,
William I.
Weis
,
Axel T.
Brunger
,
Petrus H.
Zwart
,
Paul D.
Adams
,
Athina
Zouni
,
Johannes
Messinger
,
Uwe
Bergmann
,
Nicholas K.
Sauter
,
Jan
Kern
,
Vittal K.
Yachandra
,
Junko
Yano
Abstract: Light-induced oxidation of water by photosystem II (PS II) in plants, algae and cyanobacteria has generated most of the dioxygen in the atmosphere. PS II, a membrane-bound multi-subunit pigment protein complex, couples the one-electron photochemistry at the reaction centre with the four-electron redox chemistry of water oxidation at the Mn4CaO5 cluster in the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC). Under illumination, the OEC cycles through five intermediate S-states (S0 to S4)1, in which S1 is the dark-stable state and S3 is the last semi-stable state before O–O bond formation and O2 evolution2, 3. A detailed understanding of the O–O bond formation mechanism remains a challenge, and will require elucidation of both the structures of the OEC in the different S-states and the binding of the two substrate waters to the catalytic site4, 5, 6. Here we report the use of femtosecond pulses from an X-ray free electron laser (XFEL) to obtain damage-free, room temperature structures of dark-adapted (S1), two-flash illuminated (2F; S3-enriched), and ammonia-bound two-flash illuminated (2F-NH3; S3-enriched) PS II. Although the recent 1.95 Å resolution structure of PS II at cryogenic temperature using an XFEL7 provided a damage-free view of the S1 state, measurements at room temperature are required to study the structural landscape of proteins under functional conditions8, 9, and also for in situ advancement of the S-states. To investigate the water-binding site(s), ammonia, a water analogue, has been used as a marker, as it binds to the Mn4CaO5 cluster in the S2 and S3 states10. Since the ammonia-bound OEC is active, the ammonia-binding Mn site is not a substrate water site10, 11, 12, 13. This approach, together with a comparison of the native dark and 2F states, is used to discriminate between proposed O–O bond formation mechanisms.
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Nov 2016
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Franklin D
Fuller
,
Sheraz
Gul
,
Ruchira
Chatterjee
,
E. Sethe
Burgie
,
Iris D.
Young
,
Hugo
Lebrette
,
Vivek
Srinivas
,
Aaron
Brewster
,
Tara
Michels-clark
,
Jonathan A
Clinger
,
Babak
Andi
,
Mohamed
Ibrahim
,
Ernest
Pastor
,
Casper
De Lichtenberg
,
Rana
Hussein
,
Christopher J
Pollock
,
Miao
Zhang
,
Claudiu A
Stan
,
Thomas
Kroll
,
Thomas
Fransson
,
Clemens
Weninger
,
Markus
Kubin
,
Pierre
Aller
,
Louise
Lassalle
,
Philipp
Braeuer
,
Mitchell D.
Miller
,
Muhamed
Amin
,
Sergey
Koroidov
,
Christian G.
Roessler
,
Marc
Allaire
,
Raymond G
Sierra
,
Peter T.
Docker
,
James M.
Glownia
,
Silke
Nelson
,
Jason E
Koglin
,
Diling
Zhu
,
Matthieu
Chollet
,
Sanghoon
Song
,
Henrik
Lemke
,
Mengning
Liang
,
Dimosthenis
Sokaras
,
Roberto
Alonso-mori
,
Athina
Zouni
,
Johannes
Messinger
,
Uwe
Bergmann
,
Amie K.
Boal
,
J. Martin
Bollinger
,
Carsten
Krebs
,
Martin
Högbom
,
George N.
Phillips
,
Richard D.
Vierstra
,
Nicholas K
Sauter
,
Allen M.
Orville
,
Jan
Kern
,
Vittal K
Yachandra
,
Junko
Yano
Abstract: X-ray crystallography at X-ray free-electron laser sources is a powerful method for studying macromolecules at biologically relevant temperatures. Moreover, when combined with complementary techniques like X-ray emission spectroscopy, both global structures and chemical properties of metalloenzymes can be obtained concurrently, providing insights into the interplay between the protein structure and dynamics and the chemistry at an active site. The implementation of such a multimodal approach can be compromised by conflicting requirements to optimize each individual method. In particular, the method used for sample delivery greatly affects the data quality. We present here a robust way of delivering controlled sample amounts on demand using acoustic droplet ejection coupled with a conveyor belt drive that is optimized for crystallography and spectroscopy measurements of photochemical and chemical reactions over a wide range of time scales. Studies with photosystem II, the phytochrome photoreceptor, and ribonucleotide reductase R2 illustrate the power and versatility of this method.
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Feb 2017
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Philip
Roedig
,
Helen M.
Ginn
,
Tim
Pakendorf
,
Geoff
Sutton
,
Karl
Harlos
,
Thomas S.
Walter
,
Jan
Meyer
,
Pontus
Fischer
,
Ramona
Duman
,
Ismo
Vartiainen
,
Bernd
Reime
,
Martin
Warmer
,
Aaron S.
Brewster
,
Iris D.
Young
,
Tara
Michels-clark
,
Nicholas K.
Sauter
,
Abhay
Kotecha
,
James
Kelly
,
David J.
Rowlands
,
Marcin
Sikorsky
,
Silke
Nelson
,
Daniel S.
Damiani
,
Roberto
Alonso-mori
,
Jingshan
Ren
,
Elizabeth E.
Fry
,
Christian
David
,
David I. Stuart
Stuart
,
Armin
Wagner
,
Alke
Meents
Abstract: We report a method for serial X-ray crystallography at X-ray free-electron lasers (XFELs), which allows for full use of the current 120-Hz repetition rate of the Linear Coherent Light Source (LCLS). Using a micropatterned silicon chip in combination with the high-speed Roadrunner goniometer for sample delivery, we were able to determine the crystal structures of the picornavirus bovine enterovirus 2 (BEV2) and the cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus type 18 polyhedrin, with total data collection times of less than 14 and 10 min, respectively. Our method requires only micrograms of sample and should therefore broaden the applicability of serial femtosecond crystallography to challenging projects for which only limited sample amounts are available. By synchronizing the sample exchange to the XFEL repetition rate, our method allows for most efficient use of the limited beam time available at XFELs and should enable a substantial increase in sample throughput at these facilities.
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Jun 2017
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Helen M. E.
Duyvesteyn
,
Helen M.
Ginn
,
Maija K.
Pietila
,
Armin
Wagner
,
Johan
Hattne
,
Jonathan M.
Grimes
,
Elina
Hirvonen
,
Gwyndaf
Evans
,
Marie-laure
Parsy
,
Nicholas K.
Sauter
,
Aaron S.
Brewster
,
Juha
Huiskonen
,
David I.
Stuart
,
Geoff
Sutton
,
Dennis H.
Bamford
Open Access
Abstract: Viruses are a significant threat to both human health and the economy, and there is an urgent need for novel anti-viral drugs and vaccines. High-resolution viral structures inform our understanding of the virosphere, and inspire novel therapies. Here we present a method of obtaining such structural information that avoids potentially disruptive handling, by collecting diffraction data from intact infected cells. We identify a suitable combination of cell type and virus to accumulate particles in the cells, establish a suitable time point where most cells contain virus condensates and use electron microscopy to demonstrate that these are ordered crystalline arrays of empty capsids. We then use an X-ray free electron laser to provide extremely bright illumination of sub-micron intracellular condensates of bacteriophage phiX174 inside living Escherichia coli at room temperature. We have been able to collect low resolution diffraction data. Despite the limited resolution and completeness of these initial data, due to a far from optimal experimental setup, we have used novel methodology to determine a putative space group, unit cell dimensions, particle packing and likely maturation state of the particles.
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Feb 2018
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Jan
Kern
,
Ruchira
Chatterjee
,
Iris D.
Young
,
Franklin D.
Fuller
,
Louise
Lassalle
,
Mohamed
Ibrahim
,
Sheraz
Gul
,
Thomas
Fransson
,
Aaron S.
Brewster
,
Roberto
Alonso-mori
,
Rana
Hussein
,
Miao
Zhang
,
Lacey
Douthit
,
Casper
De Lichtenberg
,
Mun Hon
Cheah
,
Dmitry
Shevela
,
Julia
Wersig
,
Ina
Seuffert
,
Dimosthenis
Sokaras
,
Ernest
Pastor
,
Clemens
Weninger
,
Thomas
Kroll
,
Raymond G.
Sierra
,
Pierre
Aller
,
Agata
Butryn
,
Allen M.
Orville
,
Mengning
Liang
,
Alexander
Batyuk
,
Jason E.
Koglin
,
Sergio
Carbajo
,
Sébastien
Boutet
,
Nigel W.
Moriarty
,
James M.
Holton
,
Holger
Dobbek
,
Paul D.
Adams
,
Uwe
Bergmann
,
Nicholas K.
Sauter
,
Athina
Zouni
,
Johannes
Messinger
,
Junko
Yano
,
Vittal K.
Yachandra
Abstract: Inspired by the period-four oscillation in flash-induced oxygen evolution of photosystem II discovered by Joliot in 1969, Kok performed additional experiments and proposed a five-state kinetic model for photosynthetic oxygen evolution, known as Kok’s S-state clock or cycle1,2. The model comprises four (meta)stable intermediates (S0, S1, S2 and S3) and one transient S4 state, which precedes dioxygen formation occurring in a concerted reaction from two water-derived oxygens bound at an oxo-bridged tetra manganese calcium (Mn4CaO5) cluster in the oxygen-evolving complex3,4,5,6,7. This reaction is coupled to the two-step reduction and protonation of the mobile plastoquinone QB at the acceptor side of PSII. Here, using serial femtosecond X-ray crystallography and simultaneous X-ray emission spectroscopy with multi-flash visible laser excitation at room temperature, we visualize all (meta)stable states of Kok’s cycle as high-resolution structures (2.04–2.08 Å). In addition, we report structures of two transient states at 150 and 400 µs, revealing notable structural changes including the binding of one additional ‘water’, Ox, during the S2→S3 state transition. Our results suggest that one water ligand to calcium (W3) is directly involved in substrate delivery. The binding of the additional oxygen Ox in the S3 state between Ca and Mn1 supports O–O bond formation mechanisms involving O5 as one substrate, where Ox is either the other substrate oxygen or is perfectly positioned to refill the O5 position during O2 release. Thus, our results exclude peroxo-bond formation in the S3 state, and the nucleophilic attack of W3 onto W2 is unlikely.
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Nov 2018
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Open Access
Abstract: The DIALS diffraction-modeling software package has been applied to serial crystallography data. Diffraction modeling is an exercise in determining the experimental parameters, such as incident beam wavelength, crystal unit cell and orientation, and detector geometry, that are most consistent with the observed positions of Bragg spots. These parameters can be refined by nonlinear least-squares fitting. In previous work, it has been challenging to refine both the positions of the sensors (metrology) on multipanel imaging detectors such as the CSPAD and the orientations of all of the crystals studied. Since the optimal models for metrology and crystal orientation are interdependent, alternate cycles of panel refinement and crystal refinement have been required. To simplify the process, a sparse linear algebra technique for solving the normal equations was implemented, allowing the detector panels to be refined simultaneously against the diffraction from thousands of crystals with excellent computational performance. Separately, it is shown how to refine the metrology of a second CSPAD detector, positioned at a distance of 2.5 m from the crystal, used for recording low-angle reflections. With the ability to jointly refine the detector position against the ensemble of all crystals used for structure determination, it is shown that ensemble refinement greatly reduces the apparent nonisomorphism that is often observed in the unit-cell distributions from still-shot serial crystallography. In addition, it is shown that batching the images by timestamp and re-refining the detector position can realistically model small, time-dependent variations in detector position relative to the sample, and thereby improve the integrated structure-factor intensity signal and heavy-atom anomalous peak heights.
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Sep 2018
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Mohamed
Ibrahim
,
Thomas
Fransson
,
Ruchira
Chatterjee
,
Mun Hon
Cheah
,
Rana
Hussein
,
Louise
Lassalle
,
Kyle D.
Sutherlin
,
Iris D.
Young
,
Franklin D.
Fuller
,
Sheraz
Gul
,
In-sik
Kim
,
Philipp S.
Simon
,
Casper
De Lichtenberg
,
Petko
Chernev
,
Isabel
Bogacz
,
Cindy C.
Pham
,
Allen M.
Orville
,
Nicholas
Saichek
,
Trent
Northen
,
Alexander
Batyuk
,
Sergio
Carbajo
,
Roberto
Alonso-mori
,
Kensuke
Tono
,
Shigeki
Owada
,
Asmit
Bhowmick
,
Robert
Bolotovsky
,
Derek
Mendez
,
Nigel W.
Moriarty
,
James M.
Holton
,
Holger
Dobbek
,
Aaron S.
Brewster
,
Paul D.
Adams
,
Nicholas K.
Sauter
,
Uwe
Bergmann
,
Athina
Zouni
,
Johannes
Messinger
,
Jan
Kern
,
Vittal K.
Yachandra
,
Junko
Yano
Open Access
Abstract: In oxygenic photosynthesis, light-driven oxidation of water to molecular oxygen is carried out by the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) in photosystem II (PS II). Recently, we reported the room-temperature structures of PS II in the four (semi)stable S-states, S1, S2, S3, and S0, showing that a water molecule is inserted during the S2 → S3 transition, as a new bridging O(H)-ligand between Mn1 and Ca. To understand the sequence of events leading to the formation of this last stable intermediate state before O2 formation, we recorded diffraction and Mn X-ray emission spectroscopy (XES) data at several time points during the S2 → S3 transition. At the electron acceptor site, changes due to the two-electron redox chemistry at the quinones, QA and QB, are observed. At the donor site, tyrosine YZ and His190 H-bonded to it move by 50 µs after the second flash, and Glu189 moves away from Ca. This is followed by Mn1 and Mn4 moving apart, and the insertion of OX(H) at the open coordination site of Mn1. This water, possibly a ligand of Ca, could be supplied via a “water wheel”-like arrangement of five waters next to the OEC that is connected by a large channel to the bulk solvent. XES spectra show that Mn oxidation (τ of ∼350 µs) during the S2 → S3 transition mirrors the appearance of OX electron density. This indicates that the oxidation state change and the insertion of water as a bridging atom between Mn1 and Ca are highly correlated.
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May 2020
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Vivek
Srinivas
,
Rahul
Banerjee
,
Hugo
Lebrette
,
Jason C.
Jones
,
Oskar
Aurelius
,
In-sik
Kim
,
Cindy C.
Pham
,
Sheraz
Gul
,
Kyle
Sutherlin
,
Asmit
Bhowmick
,
Juliane
John
,
Esra
Bozkurt
,
Thomas
Fransson
,
Pierre
Aller
,
Agata
Butryn
,
Isabel
Bogacz
,
Philipp Stefan
Simon
,
Stephen
Keable
,
Alexander
Britz
,
Kensuke
Tono
,
Kyung-sook
Kim
,
Sang-youn
Park
,
Sang-jae
Lee
,
Jaehyun
Park
,
Roberto
Alonso-mori
,
Franklin
Fuller
,
Alexander
Batyuk
,
Aaron S.
Brewster
,
Uwe
Bergmann
,
Nicholas
Sauter
,
Allen M.
Orville
,
Vittal K.
Yachandra
,
Junko
Yano
,
John D.
Lipscomb
,
Jan F.
Kern
,
Martin
Högbom
Abstract: Soluble methane monooxygenase (sMMO) is a multicomponent metalloenzyme that catalyzes the conversion of methane to methanol at ambient temperature using a nonheme, oxygen-bridged dinuclear iron cluster in the active site. Structural changes in the hydroxylase component (sMMOH) containing the diiron cluster caused by complex formation with a regulatory component (MMOB) and by iron reduction are important for the regulation of O2 activation and substrate hydroxylation. Structural studies of metalloenzymes using traditional synchrotron-based X-ray crystallography are often complicated by partial X-ray-induced photoreduction of the metal center, thereby obviating determination of the structure of pure oxidation states. Here microcrystals of the sMMOH:MMOB complex from Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b were serially exposed to X-ray free electron laser (XFEL) pulses, where the ≦35 fs duration of exposure of an individual crystal yields diffraction data before photoreduction-induced structural changes can manifest. Merging diffraction patterns obtained from thousands of crystals generates radiation damage free, 1.95 Å resolution crystal structures for the fully oxidized and fully reduced states of the sMMOH:MMOB complex for the first time. The results provide new insight into the manner by which the diiron cluster and the active site environment are reorganized by the regulatory protein component in order to enhance the steps of oxygen activation and methane oxidation. This study also emphasizes the value of XFEL and serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX) methods for investigating the structures of metalloenzymes with radiation sensitive metal active sites.
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Jul 2020
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