On Tuesday, October 30, 2012 01:44:43 pm Adrian Goldman wrote: > The coordination is indicative but not conclusive but, as I responded to the > original poster, I think the best approach is to use anomalous scattering. > You can measure just below and above the Ca edge,
Actually, you can't. The Ca K-edge is at 3.07Å, which is not a wavelength amenable to macromolecular data collection. cheers, Ethan > and similarly with the Zn, and those maps will be _highly_ indicative of the > relative amounts of metal ion present. In fact, you can deconvolute so that > you know the occupancy of the metals at the various sites. > > Adrian > > > On 30 Oct 2012, at 22:37, Chittaranjan Das wrote: > > > Veerendra, > > > > You can rule out if zinc has replaced calcium ions (although I agree with > > Nat and others that looking at the coordination sphere should give a big > > clue) by taking a few crystals, washing them a couple of times and > > subjecting them to ICP-MS analysis, if you have access to this technique. > > You can learn how many zinc, if any, have bound per one protein molecule in > > the dissolved crystal. > > > > Best > > Chitta > > > > > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: "Veerendra Kumar" <veerendra.ku...@uconn.edu> > > To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK > > Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2012 2:55:33 PM > > Subject: [ccp4bb] Ca or Zn > > > > Dear CCP4bb users, > > > > I am working on a Ca2+ binding protein. it has 4-5 ca2+ binding sites. I > > purified the protein in presence of Ca2+ and crystallized the Ca2+ bound > > protein. I got crystal and solved the structure by SAD phasing at 2.1A > > resolution. I can see the clear density in the difference map for metals at > > the expected binding sites. However I had ZnCl2 in the crystallization > > conditions. Now i am not sure whether the observed density is for Ca or Zn > > or how many of them are ca or zn? Since Ca (20 elctron) and Zn (30 > > electron), is this value difference can be used to make a guess about > > different ions? > > is there any way we can find the electron density value at different peaks? > > > > Thank you > > > > Veerendra > -- Ethan A Merritt Biomolecular Structure Center, K-428 Health Sciences Bldg University of Washington, Seattle 98195-7742