On Monday, January 09, 2012 11:37:23 am Ed Pozharski wrote: > On Mon, 2012-01-09 at 18:15 +0000, Theresa H. Hsu wrote: > > Dear crystallographers > > > > A theoretical question - can sub-angstrom resolution structures only be > > obtained for a limited set of proteins? Is it impossible to achieve for > > membrane proteins and large complexes? > > > > Theresa > > On the matter of large proteins. > > Let's say your molecule is so big, the unit cell parameters are > 300x300x300 A. To obtain 1A data, you need reflections with miller > indices of ~300. For these to be measurable, you need, I presume, ~300 > unit cells in each direction (otherwise you don't even have a formed > Bragg plane). 300A x 300 ~ 10^5 A, or 10 micron. So it seems to me > that with large molecules you would essentially hit the crystal size > limit. In reality, to get any decent data one would need maybe 3000 > unit cells, or 100 micron crystal. While such crystals could > theoretically grow (maybe in microgravity), it is highly unlikely that > the whole crystal will be essentially a single mosaic block. Simply > because large proteins are always multi-domain, and thus too flexible.
The ground-breaking work by Chapman et al. using the Stanford FEL to record diffraction from nanocrystals of Photosystem II would seem to constitute an encouraging counter-example Nature [2011] doi:10.1038/Nature09750 > So I'd say while everything is theoretically possible, for very large > proteins the probability of getting submicron resolution is exceedingly > small. It remains to be seen what resolution might ultimately be achieved by nanocrystal experiments. As I understand it, the resolution of the work to date has been limited by the apparatus rather than by the crystals. Ethan -- Ethan A Merritt Biomolecular Structure Center, K-428 Health Sciences Bldg University of Washington, Seattle 98195-7742