4.5 Article

Lifetimes and spatio-temporal response of protein crystals in intense X-ray microbeams

Journal

IUCRJ
Volume 4, Issue -, Pages 785-794

Publisher

INT UNION CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
DOI: 10.1107/S2052252517013495

Keywords

protein crystallography; radiation damage; serial crystallography; microcrystallography; structure determination; protein structure; X-ray crystallography; structural biology; intense X-ray microbeams

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation, Division of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences [MCB-1330685]
  2. US Department of Energy, Office of Science [DE-AC02-06CH11357]

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Serial synchrotron-based crystallography using intense microfocused X-ray beams, fast-framing detectors and protein microcrystals held at 300 K promises to expand the range of accessible structural targets and to increase overall structure-pipeline throughputs. To explore the nature and consequences of X-ray radiation damage under microbeam illumination, the time-, dose- and temperature-dependent evolution of crystal diffraction have been measured with maximum dose rates of 50 MGy s(-1). At all temperatures and dose rates, the integrated diffraction intensity for a fixed crystal orientation shows non-exponential decays with dose. Non-exponential decays are a consequence of non-uniform illumination and the resulting spatial evolution of diffracted intensity within the illuminated crystal volume. To quantify radiation-damage lifetimes and the damage state of diffracting crystal regions, a revised diffraction-weighted dose (DWD) is defined and it is shown that for Gaussian beams the DWD becomes nearly independent of actual dose at large doses. An apparent delayed onset of radiation damage seen in some intensity-dose curves is in fact a consequence of damage. Intensity fluctuations at high dose rates may arise from the impulsive release of gaseous damage products. Accounting for these effects, data collection at the highest dose rates increases crystal radiation lifetimes near 300 K (but not at 100 K) by a factor of similar to 1.5-2 compared with those observed at conventional dose rates. Improved quantification and modeling of the complex spatio-temporal evolution of protein microcrystal diffraction in intense microbeams will enable more efficient data collection, and will be essential in improving the accuracy of structure factors and structural models.

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