Author:
Cornaby Sterling,Szebenyi Doletha M. E.,Smilgies Detlef-M.,Schuller David J.,Gillilan Richard,Hao Quan,Bilderback Donald H.
Abstract
Crystal size is an important factor in determining the number of diffraction patterns which may be obtained from a protein crystal before severe radiation damage sets in. As crystal dimensions decrease this number is reduced, eventually falling to one, at which point a complete data set must be assembled using data from multiple crystals. When only a single exposure is to be collected from each crystal, the polychromatic Laue technique may be preferable to monochromatic methods owing to its simultaneous recording of a large number of fully recorded reflections per image. To assess the feasibility of solving structures using single Laue images from multiple crystals, data were collected using a `pink' beam at the CHESS D1 station from groups of lysozyme crystals with dimensions of the order of 20–30 µm mounted on MicroMesh grids. Single-shot Laue data were used for structure determination by molecular replacement and correct solutions were obtained even when as few as five crystals were used.
Publisher
International Union of Crystallography (IUCr)
Subject
General Medicine,Structural Biology
Cited by
21 articles.
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