Newsletter 184
December 1, 2008


The NIH X-Ray Diffraction Interest Group

Newsletter web site: http://mcl1.ncifcrf.gov/nihxray

Special Item: Photos and Reports of IUCr 2008

     

Item 1: November 2008 Publications by Members of the Group

1: Dabrazhynetskaya A, Brendler T, Ji X, Austin S.
Switching protein-DNA recognition specificity by single amino acid
substitutions in the P1 par family of plasmid partition elements.
J Bacteriol. 2008 Nov 21. PMID: 19028896

2: Davis KL, Bibollet-Ruche F, Li H, Decker JM, Kutsch O, Morris L,
Salomon A, Pinter A, Hoxie JA, Hahn BH, Kwong PD, Shaw GM.
HIV-2/HIV-1 Envelope Chimeras Detect High Titers of Broadly Reactive
HIV-1 V3-Specific Antibodies in Human Plasma.
J Virol. 2008 Nov 19. PMID: 19019969

3: Mans J, Zhi L, Revilleza MJ, Smith L, Redwood A, Natarajan K,
Margulies DH.
Structure and function of murine cytomegalovirus MHC-I-like molecules:
how the virus turned the host defense to its advantage.
Immunol Res. 2008 Nov 15. PMID: 19011767

4: Lu J, Marnell LL, Marjon KD, Mold C, Du Clos TW, Sun PD.
Structural recognition and functional activation of FcgammaR by innate
pentraxins.
Nature. 2008 Nov 16. PMID: 19011614

5: Yang D, Rismanchi N, Renvoisé B, Lippincott-Schwartz J, Blackstone C,
Hurley JH.
Structural basis for midbody targeting of spastin by the ESCRT-III
protein CHMP1B.
Nat Struct Mol Biol. 2008 Nov 9. PMID: 18997780

Item 2: Tips and Tricks

Click for Introduction and tips and tricks in Pre-crystallization modification, Crystallization, Post-crystallization treatment, Derivatization, Diffraction, Symmetry, Structure Solution, Structure Refinement, and Structure Analysis & Presentation.

Drs. Jichun Ma and Di Xia (NCI): The Use of Blue-Native PAGE in the Evaluation of Membrane Protein Aggregation States for Crystallization
     Abstract:
Crystallization has long been one of the bottlenecks in obtaining structural information at atomic resolution for membrane proteins. This is largely due to difficulties in obtaining high-quality protein samples. One frequently used indicator of protein quality for successful crystallization is the monodispersity of proteins in solution, which is conventionally obtained by size exclusion chromatography (SEC) or by dynamic light scattering (DLS). Although useful in evaluating the quality of soluble proteins, these methods are not always applicable to membrane proteins either because of the interference from detergent micelles or because of the requirement for large sample quantities. Here, we report the use of Blue Native-PAGE (BN-PAGE) to assess aggregation states of membrane protein samples. We demonstrate a strong correlation between the monodispersity measured by BN-PAGE and the propensity for crystallization of a number of soluble and membrane protein complexes. Moreover, we show that there is a direct correspondence between the oligomeric states of proteins as measured by BN-PAGE and those obtained from their crystalline forms. When applied to a membrane protein with unknown structure, BN-PAGE was found useful and efficient for selecting well-behaved proteins from various constructs and in screening detergents. Comparisons of BN-PAGE with DLS and SEC are provided. (Full Article)


Item 3: Topic Discussion - Validation

Mariusz Jaskolski (CBR): Ultra-High Resolution Structures in Validation

    Abstract: In variance with small-molecule crystallography, where structure refinement is highly overdetermined by a large surplus of diffraction data, the observation/parameter ratio in macromolecular crystallography is usually low and only at about 2.7-2.5 Å resolution reaches 1.0 for reasonably constructed models. It is, therefore, not only useful but mathematically necessary to use stereochemical restraints in macromolecular refinement at low resolution. At higher resolution the restraints are still used, for a variety of reasons, but at some point, usually when atomic resolution (1.2 Å) has been reached, they may be relaxed as the diffraction terms are "taking the refinement over". It is a valid question, however, if the restraints could be dropped altogether, and if yes, under what conditions. A separate question concerns the restraint targets themselves and the strictness with which they should be obeyed. The most popular library of stereochemical standards was compiled in 1991 by Engh and Huber from careful analysis of small-molecule structures available at that time in the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD). A survey of the entries deposited in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) indicates that often the models are forced to imitate the standards more closely than justified by the errors with which those standards were originally estimated. Additionally, with a nearly six-fold expansion of the CSD from 80,000 entries in 1991, it might be interesting to see if the "old" stereochemical standards are still valid. An even more interesting possibility is opened up by the explosive growth of the PDB (100-fold since 1990), now holding more than 52,000 entries, and especially by the rapid accumulation of ultra-high resolution protein structures. For example, 0.8 Å resolution macromolecular structures were unknown in 1997, while today there are about two dozen of them. Such structures are usually refined with utmost care and are only minimally "contaminated" by the prior knowledge enforced by stereochemical restraints. They offer, therefore, a unique possibility to review (and if necessary to adjust) the stereochemical standards of protein structure. A preliminary analysis indicates that while some of the "old" standards have withstood the test of time, some others might need small but clear adjustments. This is especially true of the peptide group, which can show higher deviations (up to 20º) from strict planarity than allowed by the restraints. It is also important conceptually that we are now able to obtain "protein parameters from proteins". With the currently attainable level of accuracy, one can investigate if there are any detectable idiosyncrasies of protein structure, related for instance to the specific nature of protein conformation or to specific interactions with the environment. Finally, the parameters derived from ultra-high resolution protein structures can serve not only as more appropriate stereochemical targets for model refinement but may also be used as validation criteria for lower resolution models. (Presentation)

     

Click for previous discussions on: Twinning, Low Resolution Crystallography, PHASER, HKL2000, Parallel Protein Expression, Structural Genomics, NCS, Missing Atoms, Trends in Crystallography, and Absorption Correction.

 

Item 4: Dr. Zbigniew Dauter's Lectures at the NIH (2005)

Part 1: "How to read international tables?"

Part 2: "Data collection strategy" and "Twinning"

           "Phasing methods - a general introduction to all methods"

Part 3: "SAD phasing, Quick halide soaking, and Radiation damage 

           with possible use of it for phasing"


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