Abstract

Determination of protein crystal structures requires that the phases are derived independently of the observed measurement of diffraction intensities. Many techniques have been developed to obtain phases, including heavy-atom substitution, molecular replacement and substitution during protein expression of the amino acid methionine with selenomethionine. Although the use of selenium-containing methionine has transformed the experimental determination of phases it is not always possible, either because the variant protein cannot be produced or does not crystallize. Phasing of structures by measuring the anomalous diffraction from S atoms could in theory be almost universal since almost all proteins contain methionine or cysteine. Indeed, many structures have been solved by the so-called native sulfur single-wavelength anomalous diffraction (S-SAD) phasing method. However, the anomalous effect is weak at the wavelengths where data are normally recorded (between 1 and 2 Å) and this limits the potential of this method to well diffracting crystals. Longer wavelengths increase the strength of the anomalous signal but at the cost of increasing air absorption and scatter, which degrade the precision of the anomalous measurement, consequently hindering phase determination. A new instrument, the long-wavelength beamline I23 at Diamond Light Source, was designed to work at significantly longer wavelengths compared with standard synchrotron beamlines in order to open up the native S-SAD method to projects of increasing complexity. Here, the first novel structure, that of the oxidase domain involved in the production of the natural product patellamide, solved on this beamline is reported using data collected to a resolution of 3.15 Å at a wavelength of 3.1 Å. The oxidase is an example of a protein that does not crystallize as the selenium variant and for which no suitable homology model for molecular replacement was available. Initial attempts collecting anomalous diffraction data for native sulfur phasing on a standard macromolecular crystallography beamline using a wavelength of 1.77 Å did not yield a structure. The new beamline thus has the potential to facilitate structure determination by native S-SAD phasing for what would previously have been regarded as very challenging cases with modestly diffracting crystals and low sulfur content.

Highlights

  • The majority of structures from macromolecular crystals can nowadays be solved by molecular replacement

  • We present ThcOx, the first novel structure to be solved by in-vacuum long-wavelength macromolecular crystallography on beamline I23 at Diamond Light Source (Wagner et al, 2016), and its subsequent high-resolution structure solved by molecular replacement

  • We have reported the first structure of an oxidase protein from a cyanobactin pathway

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Summary

Introduction

The majority of structures from macromolecular crystals can nowadays be solved by molecular replacement. In the absence of suitable homology models, experimental phasing is the method of choice to overcome the. This method requires measurements of the small anomalous differences arising when tuning the wavelength of the X-rays towards the absorption edges of atoms bound to the structures. The most successful label used is selenium by substituting the amino acid methionine by selenomethionine. This technique is not universal as it is not compatible with all expression systems and, even if the labelled protein can be produced, crystallization fails in some cases

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