Von Dreele R B, Stephens P W, Smith G D, Blessing R H
Manuel Lujan Jr Neutron Scattering Center, MS H805, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM 87545, USA.
Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr. 2000 Dec;56(Pt 12):1549-53. doi: 10.1107/s0907444900013901.
X-ray diffraction analysis of protein structure is often limited by the availability of suitable crystals. However, the absence of single crystals need not present an insurmountable obstacle in protein crystallography any more than it does in materials science, where powder diffraction techniques have developed to the point where complex oxide, zeolite and small organic molecular structures can often be solved from powder data alone. Here, that fact is demonstrated with the structure solution and refinement of a new variant of the T(3)R(3) Zn-human insulin complex produced by mechanical grinding of a polycrystalline sample. High-resolution synchrotron X-ray powder diffraction data were used to solve this crystal structure by molecular replacement adapted for Rietveld refinement. A complete Rietveld refinement of the 1630-atom protein was achieved by combining 7981 stereochemical restraints with a 4800-step (d(min) = 3.24 A) powder diffraction pattern and yielded the residuals R(wp) = 3.73%, R(p) = 2.84%, R(F)(2) = 8.25%. It was determined that the grinding-induced phase change is accompanied by 9.5 and 17.2 degrees rotations of the two T(3)R(3) complexes that comprise the crystal structure. The material reverts over 2-3 d to recover the original T(3)R(3) crystal structure. A Rietveld refinement of this 815-atom protein by combining 3886 stereochemical restraints with a 6000-step (d(min) = 3.06 A) powder diffraction pattern yielded the residuals R(wp) = 3.46%, R(p) = 2.64%, R(F)(2) = 7.10%. The demonstrated ability to solve and refine a protein crystal structure from powder diffraction data suggests that this approach can be employed, for example, to examine structural changes in a series of protein derivatives in which the structure of one member is known from a single-crystal study.
蛋白质结构的X射线衍射分析常常受到合适晶体可得性的限制。然而,单晶的缺失在蛋白质晶体学中并不一定会构成不可逾越的障碍,这与材料科学的情况并无不同,在材料科学中,粉末衍射技术已经发展到仅通过粉末数据就能解析复杂氧化物、沸石和小有机分子结构的程度。在此,通过对多晶样品进行机械研磨制备的T(3)R(3) Zn - 人胰岛素复合物新变体的结构解析和精修证明了这一事实。利用高分辨率同步辐射X射线粉末衍射数据,通过适用于Rietveld精修的分子置换法解析了该晶体结构。通过将7981个立体化学约束与4800步(d(min) = 3.24 Å)的粉末衍射图谱相结合,实现了对包含1630个原子的蛋白质的完整Rietveld精修,得到的残余值为R(wp) = 3.73%,R(p) = 2.84%,R(F)(2) = 8.25%。确定研磨诱导的相变伴随着构成晶体结构的两个T(3)R(3)复合物分别旋转9.5度和17.2度。该材料在2 - 3天内恢复,重新获得原始的T(3)R(3)晶体结构。通过将3886个立体化学约束与6000步(d(min) = 3.06 Å)的粉末衍射图谱相结合,对包含8I5个原子的该蛋白质进行Rietveld精修,得到的残余值为R(wp) = 3.46%,R(p) = 2.64%,R(F)(%) = 7.10%。从粉末衍射数据解析和精修蛋白质晶体结构的能力表明,例如,这种方法可用于研究一系列蛋白质衍生物的结构变化,其中一个成员的结构已通过单晶研究得知。