Abstract

Time-resolved cryo-electron microscopy (TrEM) allows the study of proteins under non-equilibrium conditions on the millisecond timescale, permitting the analysis of large-scale conformational changes or assembly and disassembly processes. However, the technique is developing and there have been few comparisons with other biochemical kinetic studies. Using current methods, the shortest time delay is on the millisecond timescale (∼5-10 ms), given by the delay between sample application and vitrification, and generating longer time points requires additional approaches such as using a longer delay line between the mixing element and nozzle, or an incubation step on the grid. To compare approaches, the reaction of ATP with the skeletal actomyosin S1 complex was followed on grids prepared with a 7-700 ms delay between mixing and vitrification. Classification of the cryo-EM data allows kinetic information to be derived which agrees with previous biochemical measurements, showing fast dissociation, low occupancy during steady-state hydrolysis and rebinding once ATP has been hydrolysed. However, this rebinding effect is much less pronounced when on-grid mixing is used and may be influenced by interactions with the air-water interface. Moreover, in-flow mixing results in a broader distribution of reaction times due to the range of velocities in a laminar flow profile (temporal spread), especially for longer time delays. This work shows the potential of TrEM, but also highlights challenges and opportunities for further development.

Highlights

  • Motor proteins and many other biological macromolecules change conformations, form complexes or dissociate from their interaction partners as part of their functional cycle

  • Klebl et al On-grid and in-flow mixing for time-resolved cryo-EM 1235

  • The first relevant time delay is the time from mixing to sample application

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Summary

Introduction

Motor proteins and many other biological macromolecules change conformations, form complexes or dissociate from their interaction partners as part of their functional cycle. Such reactions often involve a series of transient intermediate states which can be trapped and analysed if the system is studied with appropriate temporal resolution. Conventional grid-making approaches allow time-resolved studies, but typical blotting is inherently slow because of the manual sample application and the relatively long blot times (seconds). This typically limits the technique to time points longer than $10 s.

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