crystallographic order
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2021 ◽  
Vol 77 (4) ◽  
pp. 471-485
Author(s):  
Janina Sprenger ◽  
Jannette Carey ◽  
Alexander Schulz ◽  
Fleur Drouard ◽  
Catherine L. Lawson ◽  
...  

Soaking small molecules into the solvent channels of protein crystals is the most common method of obtaining crystalline complexes with ligands such as substrates or inhibitors. The solvent channels of some protein crystals are large enough to allow the incorporation of macromolecules, but soaking of protein guests into protein crystals has not been reported. Such protein host crystals (here given the name hostals) incorporating guest proteins may be useful for a wide range of applications in biotechnology, for example as cargo systems or for diffraction studies analogous to the crystal sponge method. The present study takes advantage of crystals of the Escherichia coli tryptophan repressor protein (ds-TrpR) that are extensively domain-swapped and suitable for incorporating guest proteins by diffusion, as they are robust and have large solvent channels. Confocal fluorescence microscopy is used to follow the migration of cytochrome c and fluorophore-labeled calmodulin into the solvent channels of ds-TrpR crystals. The guest proteins become uniformly distributed in the crystal within weeks and enriched within the solvent channels. X-ray diffraction studies on host crystals with high concentrations of incorporated guests demonstrate that diffraction limits of ∼2.5 Å can still be achieved. Weak electron density is observed in the solvent channels, but the guest-protein structures could not be determined by conventional crystallographic methods. Additional approaches that increase the ordering of guests in the host crystal are discussed that may support protein structure determination using the hostal system in the future. This host system may also be useful for biotechnological applications where crystallographic order of the guest is not required.


2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (S2) ◽  
pp. 90-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phil K. Cook ◽  
Hugh Simons ◽  
Anders C. Jakobsen ◽  
Can Yildirim ◽  
Henning F. Poulsen ◽  
...  

IUCrJ ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 470-477 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edoardo Martino ◽  
Alla Arakcheeva ◽  
Gabriel Autès ◽  
Andrea Pisoni ◽  
Maja D. Bachmann ◽  
...  

The high-pressure synthesis and incommensurately modulated structure are reported for the new compound Sr2Pt8−x As, with x = 0.715 (5). The structure consists of Sr2Pt3As layers alternating with Pt-only corrugated grids. Ab initio calculations predict a metallic character with a dominant role of the Pt d electrons. The electrical resistivity (ρ) and Seebeck coefficient confirm the metallic character, but surprisingly, ρ showed a near-flat temperature dependence. This observation fits the description of the Mooij correlation for electrical resistivity in disordered metals, originally developed for statistically distributed point defects. The discussed material has a long-range crystallographic order, but the high concentration of Pt vacancies, incommensurately ordered, strongly influences the electronic conduction properties. This result extends the range of validity of the Mooij correlation to long-range ordered incommensurately modulated vacancies. Motivated by the layered structure, the resistivity anisotropy was measured in a focused-ion-beam micro-fabricated well oriented single crystal. A low resistivity anisotropy indicates that the layers are electrically coupled and conduction channels along different directions are intermixed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 1572-1582 ◽  
Author(s):  
Spyros D Chatziefthimiou ◽  
Mario Inclán ◽  
Petros Giastas ◽  
Athanasios Papakyriakou ◽  
Konstantina Yannakopoulou ◽  
...  

The enantioselectivity of β-cyclodextrin (β-CD) towards L- and D-N-acetyltryptophan (NAcTrp) has been studied in aqueous solution and the crystalline state. NMR studies in solution show that β-CD forms complexes of very similar but not identical geometry with both L- and D-NAcTrp and exhibits stronger binding with L-NAcTrp. In the crystalline state, only β-CD–L-NAcTrp crystallizes readily from aqueous solutions as a dimeric complex (two hosts enclosing two guest molecules). In contrast, crystals of the complex β-CD–D-NAcTrp were never obtained, although numerous conditions were tried. In aqueous solution, the orientation of the guest in both complexes is different than in the β-CD–L-NAcTrp complex in the crystal. Overall, the study shows that subtle differences observed between the β-CD–L,D-NAcTrp complexes in aqueous solution are magnified at the onset of crystallization, as a consequence of accumulation of many soft host–guest interactions and of the imposed crystallographic order, thus resulting in very dissimilar propensity of each enantiomer to produce crystals with β-CD.


2017 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 73-82 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvia Russi ◽  
Ana González ◽  
Lillian R. Kenner ◽  
Daniel A. Keedy ◽  
James S. Fraser ◽  
...  

Protein crystallography data collection at synchrotrons is routinely carried out at cryogenic temperatures to mitigate radiation damage. Although damage still takes place at 100 K and below, the immobilization of free radicals increases the lifetime of the crystals by approximately 100-fold. Recent studies have shown that flash-cooling decreases the heterogeneity of the conformational ensemble and can hide important functional mechanisms from observation. These discoveries have motivated increasing numbers of experiments to be carried out at room temperature. However, the trade-offs between increased risk of radiation damage and increased observation of alternative conformations at room temperature relative to cryogenic temperature have not been examined. A considerable amount of effort has previously been spent studying radiation damage at cryo-temperatures, but the relevance of these studies to room temperature diffraction is not well understood. Here, the effects of radiation damage on the conformational landscapes of three different proteins (T. daniellithaumatin, hen egg-white lysozyme and human cyclophilin A) at room (278 K) and cryogenic (100 K) temperatures are investigated. Increasingly damaged datasets were collected at each temperature, up to a maximum dose of the order of 107 Gy at 100 K and 105 Gy at 278 K. Although it was not possible to discern a clear trend between damage and multiple conformations at either temperature, it was observed that disorder, monitored byB-factor-dependent crystallographic order parameters, increased with higher absorbed dose for the three proteins at 100 K. At 278 K, however, the total increase in this disorder was only statistically significant for thaumatin. A correlation between specific radiation damage affecting side chains and the amount of disorder was not observed. This analysis suggests that elevated conformational heterogeneity in crystal structures at room temperature is observed despite radiation damage, and not as a result thereof.


2016 ◽  
Vol 879 ◽  
pp. 1245-1250 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vera Marx ◽  
Martin Palm

Fe-Al alloys with Al contents between 5 and 40 at.% Al were oxidised for 1000 h in synthetic air at 700 and 900 °C to determine their oxidation behaviour. The minimum Al content which is necessary for the formation of protective Al2O3 scales decreases with increasing temperature from about 17 at.% Al at 700 °C to about 12 at.% Al at 900 °C. Established parabolic rate constants for the steady state growth of Al2O3 indicate formation of γ-Al2O3 at 700 °C while at 900 °C α-Al2O3 + Θ-Al2O3 scales form. At lower Al contents scales are predominantly formed by Fe2O3 as revealed by GI-XRD. It is also found that the oxidation behaviour is independent of the crystallographic order of the alloys, i.e. whether they are disordered A2 or ordered B2.


2014 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 219-233 ◽  
Author(s):  
Slawomir Boncel ◽  
Sebastian W Pattinson ◽  
Valérie Geiser ◽  
Milo S P Shaffer ◽  
Krzysztof K K Koziol

The catalytic chemical vapour deposition (c-CVD) technique was applied in the synthesis of vertically aligned arrays of nitrogen-doped carbon nanotubes (N-CNTs). A mixture of toluene (main carbon source), pyrazine (1,4-diazine, nitrogen source) and ferrocene (catalyst precursor) was used as the injection feedstock. To optimize conditions for growing the most dense and aligned N-CNT arrays, we investigated the influence of key parameters, i.e., growth temperature (660, 760 and 860 °C), composition of the feedstock and time of growth, on morphology and properties of N-CNTs. The presence of nitrogen species in the hot zone of the quartz reactor decreased the growth rate of N-CNTs down to about one twentieth compared to the growth rate of multi-wall CNTs (MWCNTs). As revealed by electron microscopy studies (SEM, TEM), the individual N-CNTs (half as thick as MWCNTs) grown under the optimal conditions were characterized by a superior straightness of the outer walls, which translated into a high alignment of dense nanotube arrays, i.e., 5 × 108 nanotubes per mm2 (100 times more than for MWCNTs grown in the absence of nitrogen precursor). In turn, the internal crystallographic order of the N-CNTs was found to be of a ‘bamboo’-like or ‘membrane’-like (multi-compartmental structure) morphology. The nitrogen content in the nanotube products, which ranged from 0.0 to 3.0 wt %, was controlled through the concentration of pyrazine in the feedstock. Moreover, as revealed by Raman/FT-IR spectroscopy, the incorporation of nitrogen atoms into the nanotube walls was found to be proportional to the number of deviations from the sp2-hybridisation of graphene C-atoms. As studied by XRD, the temperature and the [pyrazine]/[ferrocene] ratio in the feedstock affected the composition of the catalyst particles, and hence changed the growth mechanism of individual N-CNTs into a ‘mixed base-and-tip’ (primarily of the base-type) type as compared to the purely ‘base’-type for undoped MWCNTs.


2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (11) ◽  
pp. 3038-3038
Author(s):  
Gavin A. Craig ◽  
José Sánchez Costa ◽  
Olivier Roubeau ◽  
Simon J. Teat ◽  
Guillem Aromí

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