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Slow protein dynamics probed by time-resolved oscillation crystallography at room temperature.
Aumonier, Sylvain; Engilberge, Sylvain; Caramello, Nicolas; von Stetten, David; Gotthard, Guillaume; Leonard, Gordon A; Mueller-Dieckmann, Christoph; Royant, Antoine.
Afiliación
  • Aumonier S; Structural Biology Group, European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, 71 avenue des Martyrs CS 40220, Grenoble 38043, France.
  • Engilberge S; Structural Biology Group, European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, 71 avenue des Martyrs CS 40220, Grenoble 38043, France.
  • Caramello N; Structural Biology Group, European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, 71 avenue des Martyrs CS 40220, Grenoble 38043, France.
  • von Stetten D; Hamburg Centre for Ultrafast Imaging, Universität Hamburg, HARBOR, Luruper Chaussee 149, 22761 Hamburg, Germany.
  • Gotthard G; Structural Biology Group, European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, 71 avenue des Martyrs CS 40220, Grenoble 38043, France.
  • Leonard GA; Structural Biology Group, European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, 71 avenue des Martyrs CS 40220, Grenoble 38043, France.
  • Mueller-Dieckmann C; Structural Biology Group, European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, 71 avenue des Martyrs CS 40220, Grenoble 38043, France.
  • Royant A; Structural Biology Group, European Synchrotron Radiation Facility, 71 avenue des Martyrs CS 40220, Grenoble 38043, France.
IUCrJ ; 9(Pt 6): 756-767, 2022 Nov 01.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36381146
The development of serial crystallography over the last decade at XFELs and synchrotrons has produced a renaissance in room-temperature macromolecular crystallography (RT-MX), and fostered many technical and methodological breakthroughs designed to study phenomena occurring in proteins on the picosecond-to-second timescale. However, there are components of protein dynamics that occur in much slower regimes, of which the study could readily benefit from state-of-the-art RT-MX. Here, the room-temperature structural study of the relaxation of a reaction intermediate at a synchrotron, exploiting a handful of single crystals, is described. The intermediate in question is formed in microseconds during the photoreaction of the LOV2 domain of phototropin 2 from Arabidopsis thaliana, which then decays in minutes. This work monitored its relaxation in the dark using a fast-readout EIGER X 4M detector to record several complete oscillation X-ray diffraction datasets, each of 1.2 s total exposure time, at different time points in the relaxation process. Coupled with in crystallo UV-Vis absorption spectroscopy, this RT-MX approach allowed the authors to follow the relaxation of the photoadduct, a thio-ether covalent bond between the chromophore and a cysteine residue. Unexpectedly, the return of the chromophore to its spectroscopic ground state is followed by medium-scale protein rearrangements that trigger a crystal phase transition and hinder the full recovery of the structural ground state of the protein. In addition to suggesting a hitherto unexpected role of a conserved tryptophan residue in the regulation of the photocycle of LOV2, this work provides a basis for performing routine time-resolved protein crystallography experiments at synchrotrons for phenomena occurring on the second-to-hour timescale.
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Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: IUCrJ Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Francia

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: IUCrJ Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article País de afiliación: Francia