4.2 Article

Structure-factor analysis of femtosecond micro-diffraction patterns from protein nanocrystals

Journal

ACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA SECTION A
Volume 67, Issue -, Pages 131-140

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1107/S0108767310050981

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) CBST center at UC Davis
  2. DOE [DE-SC0002141]
  3. NSF [0417142]
  4. US Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [DE-AC52-07NA27344]
  5. Joachim Herz Stiftung
  6. Max Planck Society
  7. Swedish Research Councils
  8. Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education
  9. Stiftelsen Olle Engkvist Byggmastare
  10. Helmholtz Association [VH-VI-302]
  11. DFG at the Munich Centre for Advanced Photonics
  12. National Institutes of Health [GM074929, GM082250]
  13. [DE-AC02-05CH11231]

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A complete set of structure factors has been extracted from hundreds of thousands of femtosecond single-shot X-ray microdiffraction patterns taken from randomly oriented nanocrystals. The method of Monte Carlo integration over crystallite size and orientation was applied to experimental data from Photosystem I nanocrystals. This arrives at structure factors from many partial reflections without prior knowledge of the particle-size distribution. The data were collected at the Linac Coherent Light Source (the first hard-X-ray laser user facility), to which was fitted a hydrated protein nanocrystal injector jet, according to the method of serial crystallography. The data are single 'still' diffraction snapshots, each from a different nanocrystal with sizes ranging between 100 nm and 2 mu m, so the angular width of Bragg peaks was dominated by crystal-size effects. These results were compared with single-crystal data recorded from large crystals of Photosystem I at the Advanced Light Source and the quality of the data was found to be similar. The implications for improving the efficiency of data collection by allowing the use of very small crystals, for radiation-damage reduction and for time-resolved diffraction studies at room temperature are discussed.

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