Sawaya Michael R, Rodriguez Jose, Cascio Duilio, Collazo Michael J, Shi Dan, Reyes Francis E, Hattne Johan, Gonen Tamir, Eisenberg David S
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1570; University of California, Los Angeles-Department of Energy Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1570; Department of Biological Chemistry, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1570; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1570; Molecular Biology Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90024-1570.
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Janelia Research Campus, Ashburn, VA 20147.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Oct 4;113(40):11232-11236. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1606287113. Epub 2016 Sep 19.
Electrons, because of their strong interaction with matter, produce high-resolution diffraction patterns from tiny 3D crystals only a few hundred nanometers thick in a frozen-hydrated state. This discovery offers the prospect of facile structure determination of complex biological macromolecules, which cannot be coaxed to form crystals large enough for conventional crystallography or cannot easily be produced in sufficient quantities. Two potential obstacles stand in the way. The first is a phenomenon known as dynamical scattering, in which multiple scattering events scramble the recorded electron diffraction intensities so that they are no longer informative of the crystallized molecule. The second obstacle is the lack of a proven means of de novo phase determination, as is required if the molecule crystallized is insufficiently similar to one that has been previously determined. We show with four structures of the amyloid core of the Sup35 prion protein that, if the diffraction resolution is high enough, sufficiently accurate phases can be obtained by direct methods with the cryo-EM method microelectron diffraction (MicroED), just as in X-ray diffraction. The success of these four experiments dispels the concern that dynamical scattering is an obstacle to ab initio phasing by MicroED and suggests that structures of novel macromolecules can also be determined by direct methods.
电子由于与物质的强相互作用,能从仅几百纳米厚的处于冷冻水合状态的微小三维晶体产生高分辨率衍射图案。这一发现为难以哄骗形成足够大的晶体以供传统晶体学研究或难以大量制备的复杂生物大分子提供了轻松确定其结构的前景。有两个潜在障碍。第一个是一种称为动态散射的现象,其中多次散射事件会扰乱记录的电子衍射强度,使其不再能提供有关结晶分子的信息。第二个障碍是缺乏一种经过验证的从头相位确定方法,而如果结晶的分子与先前已确定的分子相似度不够,则需要这种方法。我们通过酵母朊病毒蛋白Sup35的淀粉样核心的四种结构表明,如果衍射分辨率足够高,就可以像在X射线衍射中一样,通过低温电子显微镜方法微电子衍射(MicroED)的直接方法获得足够准确的相位。这四个实验的成功消除了人们对动态散射会阻碍通过MicroED进行从头相位测定的担忧,并表明新的大分子结构也可以通过直接方法确定。