Femtosecond X-ray diffraction from two-dimensional protein crystals.

Journal: IUCrJ
Published:
Abstract

X-ray diffraction patterns from two-dimensional (2-D) protein crystals obtained using femtosecond X-ray pulses from an X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) are presented. To date, it has not been possible to acquire transmission X-ray diffraction patterns from individual 2-D protein crystals due to radiation damage. However, the intense and ultrafast pulses generated by an XFEL permit a new method of collecting diffraction data before the sample is destroyed. Utilizing a diffract-before-destroy approach at the Linac Coherent Light Source, Bragg diffraction was acquired to better than 8.5 Å resolution for two different 2-D protein crystal samples each less than 10 nm thick and maintained at room temperature. These proof-of-principle results show promise for structural analysis of both soluble and membrane proteins arranged as 2-D crystals without requiring cryogenic conditions or the formation of three-dimensional crystals.

Authors
Matthias Frank, David Carlson, Mark Hunter, Garth Williams, Marc Messerschmidt, Nadia Zatsepin, Anton Barty, W Benner, Kaiqin Chu, Alexander Graf, Stefan Hau Riege, Richard Kirian, Celestino Padeste, Tommaso Pardini, Bill Pedrini, Brent Segelke, M Seibert, John C Spence, Ching-ju Tsai, Stephen Lane, Xiao-dan Li, Gebhard Schertler, Sebastien Boutet, Matthew Coleman, James Evans