Polysaccharide-Based Injection Matrix for Serial Crystallography.
Ki Hyun NamPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2020)
Serial crystallography (SX) provides an opportunity to observe the molecular dynamics of macromolecular structures at room temperature via pump-probe studies. The delivery of crystals embedded in a viscous medium via an injector or syringe is widely performed in synchrotrons or X-ray free-electron laser facilities with low repetition rates. Various viscous media have been developed; however, there are cases in which the delivery material undesirably interacts chemically or biologically with specific protein samples, or changes the stability of the injection stream, depending on the crystallization solution. Therefore, continued discovery and characterization of new delivery media is necessary for expanding future SX applications. Here, the preparation and characterization of new polysaccharide (wheat starch (WS) and alginate)-based sample delivery media are introduced for SX. Crystals embedded in a WS or alginate injection medium showed a stable injection stream at a flow rate of < 200 nL/min and low-level X-ray background scattering similar to other hydrogels. Using these media, serial millisecond crystallography (SMX) was performed, and the room temperature crystal structures of glucose isomerase and lysozyme were determined at 1.9-2.0 Å resolutions. WS and alginate will allow an expanded application of sample delivery media in SX experiments.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- molecular dynamics
- ionic liquid
- high resolution
- ultrasound guided
- small molecule
- wound healing
- drug delivery
- density functional theory
- computed tomography
- dual energy
- skeletal muscle
- binding protein
- tissue engineering
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- hyaluronic acid
- extracellular matrix
- protein protein
- glycemic control
- weight loss