4.2 Article

Correction of rhodopsin serial crystallography diffraction intensities for a lattice-translocation defect

Journal

Publisher

INT UNION CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
DOI: 10.1107/S2059798323000931

Keywords

serial crystallography; latticetranslocation defects; membrane proteins; lipidic cubic phase; G protein-coupled receptors

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Rhodopsin is a light-sensitive G-protein-coupled receptor that plays a crucial role in vertebrate vision. By using serial femtosecond crystallography, the structure of rhodopsin was successfully solved at room temperature. However, a lattice-translocation defect (LTD) was discovered in the crystals, which required correction to accurately interpret the data. This correction was essential in order to confidently model the unilluminated state of the receptor and analyze the light-activated data.
Rhodopsin is a G-protein-coupled receptor that detects light and initiates the intracellular signalling cascades that underpin vertebrate vision. Light sensitivity is achieved by covalent linkage to 11-cis retinal, which isomerizes upon photoabsorption. Serial femtosecond crystallography data collected from rhodopsin microcrystals grown in the lipidic cubic phase were used to solve the roomtemperature structure of the receptor. Although the diffraction data showed high completeness and good consistency to 1.8 A degrees resolution, prominent electron-density features remained unaccounted for throughout the unit cell after model building and refinement. A deeper analysis of the diffraction intensities uncovered the presence of a lattice-translocation defect (LTD) within the crystals. The procedure followed to correct the diffraction intensities for this pathology enabled the building of an improved resting-state model. The correction was essential to both confidently model the structure of the unilluminated state and interpret the light-activated data collected after photoexcitation of the crystals. It is expected that similar cases of LTD will be observed in other serial crystallography experiments and that correction will be required in a variety of systems.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.2
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available