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The agony and the ecstasy of protein crystallization M230D,Jan 2008 Crystallization Laboratory
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Goal: crystallize Proteinase K and its complex with PMSF Non-specific serine protease frequently used as a tool in molecular biology. PMSF is a suicide inhibitor. Toxic! Number of amino acids: 280 Molecular weight: 29038.0 Theoretical pI: 8.20 MAAQTNAPWGLARISSTSPGTSTYYYDESAGQGSCVYVIDTGIEASH PEFEGRAQMVKTYYYSSRDGNGHGTHCAGTVGSRTYGVAKKTQLFGVKVLDDNGS GQYSTIIAGMDFVASDKNNRNCPKGVVASLSLGGGYSSSVNSAAARLQSSGVMVA VAAGNNNADARNYSPASEPSVCTVGASDRYDRRSSFSNYGSVLDIFGPGTSILST WIGGSTRSISGTSMATPHVAGLAAYLMTLGKTTAASACRYIADTANKGDLSNIPF GTVNLLAYNNYQA Ala (A) 33 11.8% Arg (R) 12 4.3% Asn (N) 17 6.1% Asp (D) 13 4.6% Cys (C) 5 1.8% Gln (Q) 7 2.5% Glu (E) 5 1.8% Gly (G) 33 11.8% His (H) 4 1.4% Ile (I) 11 3.9% Leu (L) 14 5.0% Lys (K) 8 2.9% Met (M) 6 2.1% Phe (F) 6 2.1% Pro (P) 9 3.2% Ser (S) 37 13.2% Thr (T) 22 7.9% Trp (W) 2 0.7% Tyr (Y) 17 6.1% Val (V) 19 6.8%
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Why are crystals so important for X-ray diffraction methods ?
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It is the “order” of a crystal that ultimately determines the quality of the structure. supersaturated protein solution. One dimensional order Two dimensional order Three dimensional order Order- describes the degree of regularity (or periodicity) in the arrangement of identical objects. DISORDEREDORDERED
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Protein crystals are ordered (periodic) arrays of protein molecules. supersaturated protein solution. One dimensional order Two dimensional order Three dimensional order Order- describes the degree of regularity (or periodicity) in the arrangement of identical objects. DISORDEREDORDERED
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“Order” is perfect when the crystallized object is regularly positioned and oriented in a lattice. a b c
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Incident X-ray crystal When a crystal is ordered, strong diffraction results from constructive interference of photons. Interference is constructive because path lengths differ by some integral multiple of the wavelength (n ). This situation is possible only because the diffracting objects are periodic. 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 detector In phase
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Nonregularity in orientation or position limits the order and usefulness of a crystal. Rotational disorder Translational disorder Perfect order Disorder destroys the periodicity leading to Streaky, weak, fuzzy, diffraction.
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Incident X-rays crystal Interference is destructive because path lengths differ by non integral multiple of the wavelength (n ). Path lengths differences are not n because of disorder. 2 6 7 9 detector When a crystal is disordered, poor diffraction results from destructive interference of photons. Out of phase..
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Crystal order (and resolution) improves with increasing number of lattice contacts Trypsin (1gdn) 0.8 Å resolution Solvent content=36.6% Potassium channel (1p7b) 3.7 Å resolution Solvent content=77.7%
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Lattice contacts can form only where the protein surface is rigid. Eliminate floppy, mobile termini (cleave His tags) Express individual domains separately and crystallize separately, or… Add a ligand that bridges the domains and locks them together. Mutate high entropy residues (Glu, Lys) to Ala. By exposing rigid surface area, you enable new crystal forms previously unachievable. Illustrate this.
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Crystallization: The task of coaxing protein molecules into a crystal.
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Is crystallization spontaneous under biological conditions ? A lysozyme crystal Orientation and position of molecules are locked in a 3D array High “order” Crystallization Solubilization Solvated lysozyme monomers Random orientation and position
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The barriers to crystallization Energy penalty –Lose 3 degrees of freedom in orientation of protein molecules –Lose 3 degrees of freedom in translation of protein molecules GG N soluble lysozyme molecules nM→M n Energy gained –Some entropy gained by freeing some surface bound water molecules. –Small enthalpic gain from crystal packing interactions. Also, nucleation imposes a kinetic barrier. Unstable because too few molecules are assembled to form all lattice contacts. 1 crystal (lysozyme) N Unstable nucleus
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The barriers to crystallization GG N soluble lysozyme molecules nM→M n 1 crystal (lysozyme) N Unstable nucleus G is decreased and the nucleation barrier lowered by increasing the monomer concentration [M]. nM→M n G= G o +RTln( [M n ]/[M] n ) Lesson: To crystallize a protein, you need to increase its concentration to exceed its solubility (by 3x). Force the monomer out of solution and into the crystal. Supersaturate!
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Methods for achieving supersaturation. 1) Maximize concentration of purified protein Centricon-centrifugal force Amicon-pressure Vacuum dialysis Dialysis against high molecular weight PEG Ion exchange. Slow! Avoid precipitation. Co-solvent or low salt to maintain native state. We are going to dissolve lyophilized protein in a small volume of water. Concentrate protein
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Methods for achieving supersaturation. 2) Add a precipitating agent Polyethylene glycol PEG 8000 PEG 4000 High salt concentration (NH 4 ) 2 SO 4 NaH 2 PO 4 /Na 2 HPO 4 P olyethylene glycol Small organics ethanol Methylpentanediol (MPD) PEG Polymer of ethylene glycol Precipitating agents monopolize water molecules, driving proteins to neutralize their surface charges by interacting with one another.
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Systematic vs. Shotgun Screening Shotgun- for finding initial conditions, samples different preciptating agents, pHs, salts. Systematic-for optimizing crystallization condtions. First commercially Available crystallization Screening kit. Hampton Crystal Screen 1
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Methods for achieving supersaturation. 3) Further dehydrate the protein solution Hanging drop vapor diffusion Sitting drop vapor diffusion Dialysis Liquid-liquid interface diffusion Note: Ammonium sulfate concentration is 2M in reservoir and only 1M in the drop. With time, water will vaporize from the drop and condense in the reservoir in order to balance the salt concentration.— SUPERSATURATION is achieved! 2M ammonium sulfate Drop =½ protein + ½ reservoir
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The details of the method.
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Practical Considerations Begin with reservoirs: 1)pipet req’d amount of ammonium sulfate to each well. 2)Pipet req’d Tris buffers, to each well 3)Same with water. Then swirl tray gently to mix. When reservoirs are ready, lay 6 coverslips on the tray lid, then pipet protein drops on slips and invert over reservoir. Only 6 at a time, or else dry out. Linbro or VDX plate
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Proper use of the pipetor.
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Which pipetor would you use for delivering 320 uL of liquid? P1000 P200 P20
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Each pipetor has a different range of accuracy P1000 P200 P20 200-1000uL 20-200uL 1-20uL
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Which pipetor would you use for delivering 170 uL of ammonium sulfate? P1000 P200 P20
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How much volume will this pipetor deliver? 027027 P200 || | ||
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How much volume will this pipetor deliver? 170170 P20 || | ||
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How much volume will this pipetor deliver? 027027 P1000 || | ||
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What is wrong with this picture? 027027 P1000 || | || -------- 50 mL
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What is wrong with this picture? 027027 P1000 || | || -------- 50 mL
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Dip tip in stock solution, just under the surface. 027027 P1000 || | || -------- 50 mL
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Withdrawing and Dispensing Liquid. 3 different positions 027027 P1000 || | || 027027 P1000 || | || 027027 P1000 || | || First stop Start position Second stop
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Withdrawing solution: set volume, then push plunger to first stop to push air out of the tip. 027027 P1000 || | || First stop Start position Second stop -------- 50 mL
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Dip tip below surface of solution. Then release plunger gently to withdraw solution 027027 P1000 || | || First stop Start position Second stop
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To expel solution, push to second stop. 027027 P1000 || | || First stop Start position Second stop
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When dispensing protein, just push to first stop. Bubbles mean troubles. 027027 P1000 || | || First stop Start position Second stop
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Hanging drop vapor diffusion step two Pipet 2.5 uL of concentrated protein (50 mg/mL) onto a siliconized glass coverslip. Pipet 2.5 uL of the reservoir solution onto the protein drop 2M ammonium sulfate 0.1M buffer BUBBLES MEAN TROUBLES Expel to 1 st stop, not 2 nd stop!
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Hanging drop vapor diffusion step three Invert cover slip over reservoir quickly & deliberately. Don’t hesitate when coverslip on its side or else drop will roll off cover slip. Don’t get fingerprints on coverslip –they obscure your view of the crystal under the microscope.
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Dissolving Proteinase K powder Mix gently –Pipet up and down 5 times –Stir with pipet tip gently –Excessive mixing leads to xtal showers No bubbles 5.25 mg ProK powder 100 uL water 50 mg/mL ProK 4 uL of 0.1M PMSF
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Dissolving Proteinase K powder Mix gently –Pipet up and down 5 times –Stir with pipet tip gently –Excessive mixing leads to xtal showers No bubbles 50 mg/mL ProK Remove 50 uL Add to 5 uL of 100 mM PMSF 55 uL of 50 mg/mL ProK+PMSF complex
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Proteinase K time lapse photography Covers first 5 hours of crystal growth in 20 minute increments 500 m
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Heavy Atom Gel Shift Assay. Why?
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Why are heavy atoms used to solve the phase problem? Phase problem was first solved in 1960. Kendrew & Perutz soaked heavy atoms into a hemoglobin crystal, just as we are doing today. (isomorphous replacement). Heavy atoms are useful because they are electron dense. Bottom of periodic table. High electron density is useful because X-rays are diffracted from electrons. When the heavy atom is bound to discrete sites in a protein crystal (a derivative), it alters the X-ray diffraction pattern slightly. Comparing diffraction patterns from native and derivative data sets gives phase information.
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Why do heavy atoms have to be screened? To affect the diffraction pattern, heavy atom binding must be specific –Must bind the same site (e.g. Cys 134) on every protein molecule throughout the crystal. –Non specific binding does not help. Specific binding often requires specific side chains (e.g. Cys, His, Asp, Glu) and geometry. –It is not possible to determine whether a heavy atom will bind to a protein given only its amino acid composition.
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Before 2000, trial & error was the primary method of heavy atom screening Pick a heavy atom compound –hundreds to chose from Soak a crystal –Most of the time the heavy atom will crack the crystal. –If crystal cracks, try lower concentration or soak for less time. –Surviving crystal are sent for data collection. Collect a data set Compare diffraction intensities between native and potential derivative. Enormously wasteful of time and resources. Crystals are expensive to make. How many crystallization plates does it take to find a decent heavy atom derivative?
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Heavy Atom Gel Shift Assay Specific binding affects mobility in native gel. Compare mobility of protein in presence and absence of heavy atom. Heavy atoms which produce a gel shift are good candidates for crystal soaking Collect data on soaked crystals and compare with native. Assay performed on soluble protein, not crystal. None Hg Au Pt Pb Sm
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Procedures Just incubate protein with heavy atom for a minute. –Pipet 3 uL of protein on parafilm covered plate. –Pipet 1 uL of heavy atom as specified. –Give plate to me to load on gel. Run on a native gel We use PhastSystem Reverse Polarity electrode Room BH269 (Yeates Lab)
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