4.5 Article

Structural biology in situ - the potential of subtomogram averaging

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 261-267

Publisher

CURRENT BIOLOGY LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.sbi.2013.02.003

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Cryo-electron tomography provides low-resolution 3D views of cells, organelles, or viruses. Macromolecular complexes present in multiple copies can be subsequently identified within the 3D reconstruction (the tomogram), computationally extracted, and averaged to obtain higher resolution 3D structures, as well as a map of their spatial distribution. This method, called subtomogram averaging or subvolume averaging, allows structures of macromolecular complexes to be resolved in situ. Recent applications have provided in situ structural data at resolutions of 2-4 nm on samples including polysomes, nuclear pores, vesicle coats, and viral surface proteins. Here I describe the method and discuss limitations, advances and recent applications. I speculate how the method will solve more structures at higher resolution, allowing in situ structural biology.

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