Rajkumar Ganeshalingam, Al-Khayat Hind A, Eakins Felicity, Knupp Carlo, Squire John M
J Appl Crystallogr. 2007 Feb 1;40(Pt 1):178-184. doi: 10.1107/S0021889806048643. Epub 2007 Jan 12.
The extraction of useful information from recorded diffraction patterns from non-crystalline materials is non-trivial and is not a well defined operation. Unlike protein crystallography where one expects to see well behaved diffraction spots in predictable positions defined by standard space groups, the diffraction patterns from non-crystalline materials are very diverse. They can range from uniaxially oriented fibre patterns which are completely sampled as Bragg peaks, but rotationally averaged around the fibre axis, to fibre patterns that are completely unsampled, to either kind of pattern with considerable axial misalignment (disorientation), to liquid-like order and even to mixtures of these various structure types. In the case of protein crystallography, the specimen is generated artificially and only used if the degree of order is sufficient to yield a three-dimensional density map of high enough resolution to be interpreted sensibly. However, with non-crystalline diffraction, many of the specimens of interest are naturally occurring (e.g. cellulose, rubber, collagen, muscle, hair, silk) and to elucidate their structure it is necessary to extract structural information from the materials as they actually are and to whatever resolution is available. Even when synthetic fibres are generated from purified components (e.g. nylon, polyethylene, DNA, polysaccharides, amyloids etc.) and diffraction occurs to high resolution, it is rarely possible to obtain perfect uniaxial alignment. The CCP13 project was established in the 1990s to generate software which will be generally useful for analysis of non-crystalline diffraction patterns. Various individual programs were written which allowed separate steps in the analysis procedure to be carried out. Many of these programs have now been integrated into a single user-friendly package known as FibreFix, which is freely downloadable from http://www.ccp13.ac.uk. Here the main features of FibreFix are outlined and some of its applications are illustrated.
从非晶态材料记录的衍射图案中提取有用信息并非易事,也不是一个定义明确的操作。与蛋白质晶体学不同,在蛋白质晶体学中,人们期望在由标准空间群定义的可预测位置看到表现良好的衍射斑点,而非晶态材料的衍射图案则非常多样。它们可以从完全作为布拉格峰采样但围绕纤维轴旋转平均的单轴取向纤维图案,到完全未采样的纤维图案,到具有相当大轴向错位(取向紊乱)的任何一种图案,到类液体有序,甚至到这些各种结构类型的混合物。在蛋白质晶体学中,标本是人工生成的,只有当有序程度足以产生具有足够高分辨率以合理解释的三维密度图时才会使用。然而,对于非晶态衍射,许多感兴趣的标本是天然存在的(例如纤维素、橡胶、胶原蛋白、肌肉、毛发、丝绸),为了阐明它们的结构,有必要从实际材料中提取结构信息,并利用可用的任何分辨率。即使当合成纤维由纯化成分(例如尼龙、聚乙烯、DNA、多糖、淀粉样蛋白等)生成且衍射达到高分辨率时,也很少能够获得完美的单轴排列。CCP13项目于20世纪90年代设立,旨在开发对分析非晶态衍射图案普遍有用的软件。编写了各种单独的程序,允许在分析过程中执行单独的步骤。现在,许多这些程序已被集成到一个名为FibreFix的用户友好型单一软件包中,该软件包可从http://www.ccp13.ac.uk免费下载。这里概述了FibreFix的主要特点,并举例说明了它的一些应用。