First-ever determination of protein structure with X-ray laser

(Âé¶¹ÒùÔº) —An international team of researchers, including LLNL physicist Matthias Frank and postdoc Mark Hunter, have for the first time used an ultra-intense X-ray laser to determine the previously unknown atomic-scale structure of a protein.
The work was reported in the online edition of Science, which also featured the story as a News Flash. The team determined the structure of an enzyme key to the survival of the single-celled parasite Trypanosoma brucei, responsible for African sleeping sickness, a disease that kills 30,000 people each year.
This new structural information should help guide the search for drugs that act like the propeptide, tying up the enzyme and killing the parasite. To determine the structure of the precursor form of the protein—which does not form crystals large enough for traditional X-ray diffraction—submicron nanocrystals produced by the parasite were analyzed by the "diffraction before destruction" technique, in which individual nanocrystals are passed, one by one, through the X-ray beam at the Linac Coherent Light Source, followed by "stacking"of the resultant diffraction data—in this case, from 178,875 individual nanocrystals.
The achievement also demonstrates that the approach can provide otherwise unobtainable biomolecular information, potentially ushering in a new era of protein crystallography.
The research also was recognized as one of the "Top 10 2012 Science Breakthroughs of the Year" in Science Magazine. See the .
Journal information: Science
Provided by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory