62 research outputs found

    Endocytosed nanogold fiducials for improved in-situ cryo-electron tomography tilt-series alignment

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    Cryo-electron tomography (CET) on cryo-focused ion beam (FIB)-milled lamellae is becoming a powerful technique for determining the structure of macromolecular complexes in their native cellular environment. Prior to tomogram reconstruction, CET tilt-series recorded on FIB lamellae need to be aligned. Traditionally, CET tiltseries alignment is performed with 5-20 nm gold fiducials, but it has thus far proven difficult to apply this to FIB lamellae of eukaryotic cells. In here, we describe a simple method to allow uptake of bovine serum albumin (BSA)-gold fiducials into mammalian cells via endocytosis, which can subsequently be used as fiducials for tiltseries alignment of cryo-FIB lamellae. We compare the alignment of tilt-series with BSA-gold fiducials to fiducialless patch-tracking, and find better alignment results with BSA-gold. This technique can contribute to understand cells at a structural and ultrastructural level with both cryo- and room-temperature electron tomography. Furthermore, fluorescently labeled BSA-gold has the potential to be used as fiducials for correlative light and electron microscopy studies

    Radiation damage to nucleoprotein complexes in macromolecular crystallography

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    Significant progress has been made in macromolecular crystallography over recent years in both the understanding and mitigation of X-ray induced radiation damage when collecting diffraction data from crystalline proteins. In contrast, despite the large field that is productively engaged in the study of radiation chemistry of nucleic acids, particularly of DNA, there are currently very few X-ray crystallographic studies on radiation damage mechanisms in nucleic acids. Quantitative comparison of damage to protein and DNA crystals separately is challenging, but many of the issues are circumvented by studying pre-formed biological nucleoprotein complexes where direct comparison of each component can be made under the same controlled conditions. Here a model protein-DNA complex C.Esp1396I is employed to investigate specific damage mechanisms for protein and DNA in a biologically relevant complex over a large dose range (2.07-44.63 MGy). In order to allow a quantitative analysis of radiation damage sites from a complex series of macromolecular diffraction data, a computational method has been developed that is generally applicable to the field. Typical specific damage was observed for both the protein on particular amino acids and for the DNA on, for example, the cleavage of base-sugar N1-C and sugar-phosphate C-O bonds. Strikingly the DNA component was determined to be far more resistant to specific damage than the protein for the investigated dose range. At low doses the protein was observed to be susceptible to radiation damage while the DNA was far more resistant, damage only being observed at significantly higher doses

    Translation calibration of inverse-kappa goniometers in macromolecular crystallography

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    A rapid, easy-to-perform translation calibration procedure has been developed for use with the EMBL/ESRF mini-κ goniometer head and for other inverse-kappa goniometers designed for macromolecular crystallography. Regular calibration ensures the precision of experiments that rely on many degrees of freedom in crystal reorientation

    X-ray tomographic reconstruction of macromolecular samples

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    Colouring cryo-cooled crystals: online microspectrophotometry

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    A portable and readily aligned online microspectrophotometer that can be easily installed on macromolecular crystallography beamlines is described. It allows measurement of the spectral characteristics of macromolecular crystals prior, during, and after the X-ray diffraction experiment

    A decade of user operation on the macromolecular crystallography MAD beamline ID14-4 at the ESRF

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    The improvement of the X-ray beam quality achieved on ID14-4 by the installation of new X-ray optical elements is described

    Calibration of rotation axes for multi-axis goniometers in macromolecular crystallography

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    The installation of multi-axis goniometers such as the ESRF/EMBL miniKappa goniometer system has allowed the increased use of sample reorientation in macromolecular crystallography. Old and newly appearing data collection methods require precision and accuracy in crystal reorientation. The proper use of such multi-axis systems has necessitated the development of rapid and easy to perform methods for establishing and evaluating device calibration. A new diffraction-based method meeting these criteria has been developed for the alibration of the motors responsible for rotational motion. This method takes advantage of crystal symmetry by comparing the orientations of a sample rotated about a given axis and checking that the magnitude of the real rotation fits the calculated angle between these two orientations. Hence, the accuracy and precision of rotational motion can be assessed. This rotation calibration procedure has been performed on several beamlines at the ESRF and other synchrotrons. Some resulting data are presented here for reference. © 2018, Wiley-Blackwell. All Rights Reserved
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