Lesson 7 PPT 1

Protein structure

🧬 Protein Crystallography β€” Full Educational Summary


πŸ”¬ 1. Major methods in structural biology

Early slides introduce the four key structural biology techniques:

  • X-ray diffraction (XRD)
  • NMR spectroscopy
  • Cryo-EM
  • SAXS

πŸ“Œ The image on page 2 shows these methods visually:

  • XRD β†’ diffraction spots
  • NMR β†’ spectra
  • Cryo-EM β†’ particle images
  • SAXS β†’ scattering curves

πŸ’‘ Key idea: These methods differ in:

MethodResolutionSample state
XRDAtomic (~1–3 Γ…)Crystal
NMRAtomic–mediumSolution
Cryo-EMAtomic–mediumFrozen particles
SAXSLowSolution

πŸ‘‰ Historically X-ray crystallography dominated large macromolecular structures (>30 kDa), but Cryo-EM is now rapidly growing.


πŸ§ͺ 2. Crystallography is interdisciplinary

Slide shows that crystallography involves:

  • Physics β†’ diffraction theory
  • Chemistry β†’ bonding / interactions
  • Mathematics β†’ Fourier transforms
  • Biology β†’ proteins
  • Medicine β†’ drug targets

πŸ“Œ The image collage (page 2) represents:

  • diffraction geometry
  • molecular surfaces
  • large synchrotron facilities

πŸ’‘ Meaning: Protein structure determination is a systems science problem.


πŸ“ˆ 3. Historical milestones

Important solved structures include:

  • Hemoglobin (1937)
  • Myoglobin (1960)
  • Lysozyme (1965)
  • Ribosome (~2000)
  • Viral cores

πŸ’‘ Shows the progression from small proteins β†’ huge complexes.


βš™οΈ 4. The overall crystallography workflow

πŸ“Œ The workflow image on page 4 shows the pipeline:

1️⃣ Protein purification 2️⃣ Crystallization 3️⃣ Data collection (diffraction pattern) 4️⃣ Phasing β†’ electron density 5️⃣ Modelling β†’ atomic model 6️⃣ Analysis β†’ biological interpretation

πŸ’‘ This is THE core exam flow.


🧫 5. Purification

Slide shows SDS-PAGE band (page 5).

Meaning:

  • Protein must be pure and homogeneous
  • Aggregates or mixtures destroy crystallization

πŸ’‘ Crystallography is extremely sensitive to sample quality.


πŸ’Ž 6. Crystallization

Slide image shows colored crystal shapes (page 5).

Explanation:

  • Proteins must form ordered repeating lattice
  • Requires careful optimization of:
    • pH
    • salt
    • precipitant
    • temperature

🧊 7. Macromolecular crystals β€” very special!

Important points (page 9):

  • Contain 40–75% water
  • Not rigid solids β†’ more like soft gels
  • Enzymes may still be active
  • Crystal contacts are weak intermolecular interactions

πŸ’‘ Therefore:

πŸ‘‰ Crystal structure often reflects physiological conformation.


πŸ’§ 8. Proteins in solution and crystallization driving forces

Slide explains protein surface properties:

  • charged
  • polar
  • hydrophobic
  • pH dependent

These determine aggregation vs crystallization.

Forces involved:

  • Hydrophobic interactions
  • van der Waals
  • Polar interactions
  • Metal coordination
  • Disulfide formation

πŸ’‘ Key concept:

Crystallization = balance between kinetics and thermodynamics

Too fast β†’ precipitation Too slow β†’ no nucleation


πŸ“Š 9. Phase diagram of crystallization

πŸ“Œ The diagram on page 11 is VERY important.

It shows regions:

  • Undersaturated β†’ protein dissolved
  • Metastable β†’ crystal growth only
  • Supersaturated β†’ nucleation possible
  • Precipitation zone β†’ amorphous aggregates

πŸ’‘ Exam idea:

You must enter supersaturation zone carefully.


πŸ§ͺ 10. Crystallization methods

  • Batch
  • Dialysis
  • Vapor diffusion (hanging/sitting drop)

πŸ’‘ Vapor diffusion is most common.

Mechanism:

  • Drop equilibrates with reservoir
  • Water leaves drop β†’ protein concentration increases β†’ nucleation.

🧱 11. Unit cells and crystal lattice

Crystals = repeating unit cells.

πŸ“Œ Slide image (page 12) shows:

  • single molecule replicated billions of times

πŸ‘‰ Crystal = single molecule amplifier

This is why weak diffraction from one molecule becomes measurable.

Unit cell defined by:

  • a, b, c lengths
  • Ξ±, Ξ², Ξ³ angles

πŸ“ 12. Crystal systems and symmetry

7 systems:

  • cubic
  • tetragonal
  • hexagonal
  • orthorhombic
  • rhombohedral
  • monoclinic
  • triclinic

Symmetry operations:

  • rotation
  • screw axis
  • translation
  • inversion
  • glide

πŸ“Œ Slide with symmetry diagrams (page 16) shows:

Example:

  • 2-fold rotation: (x,y,z) β†’ (βˆ’x,y,βˆ’z)

πŸ’‘ Important:

Space group = full symmetry description.

Total = 230 space groups Only ~65 common in proteins.


🧩 13. Asymmetric unit

Definition:

  • Smallest unique part of crystal
  • Whole crystal generated by symmetry

πŸ“Œ Slide image (page 17) shows asymmetric unit copies filling unit cell.


⚑ 14. X-rays basics

Wavelength:

  • ~0.1–100 Γ…

Good because:

  • comparable to atomic spacing (~1–2 Γ…)

Historical:

  • RΓΆntgen discovery (1895)
  • Laue diffraction (1910)

πŸ”¦ 15. X-ray sources

Types:

  • Sealed tube (simple)
  • Rotating anode (stronger)
  • Synchrotron (very intense, tunable)

πŸ“Œ Slide image (page 21) shows synchrotron facility.

πŸ’‘ Modern macromolecular crystallography mostly uses synchrotrons.


🎯 16. Diffraction experiment setup

πŸ“Œ Image (page 22):

  • X-ray beam
  • crystal on goniometer
  • detector
  • rotation collects many frames

Key equation:

Ξ»min = 12.4 / V


❄️ 17. Cryo-crystallography

Crystals flash frozen at 100 K.

Why?

  • reduces radiation damage
  • improves diffraction quality

Cryoprotectants:

  • glycerol
  • PEG
  • sugars
  • oils

πŸ“Œ Image shows crystal in nylon loop.


🌊 18. Diffraction theory β€” wave interference

Huygens principle:

Each point scatters waves β†’ interference pattern.

Constructive interference β†’ reflection spot Destructive β†’ no intensity.


πŸ“ 19. Bragg’s law (SUPER IMPORTANT)

2dsin heta = nlambda

Meaning:

  • Reflection occurs when path difference = integer wavelength.

Consequences:

  • Smaller d β†’ larger angle β†’ higher resolution

Typical protein resolution:

⭐ ~1.8–3 Γ…


πŸ”’ 20. Miller indices (hkl)

Define lattice planes.

Example slide shows plane that:

  • spans a-axis
  • cuts b-axis in half β†’ k=2

So reflection = (1 2 0).


🧠 21. Diffraction from molecules vs crystals

Single molecule β†’ weak scattering.

Crystal β†’ signals add β†’ measurable.

πŸ“Œ Slide (page 32) illustrates waves from many atoms interfering.


🌌 22. Reciprocal space

Very key concept.

Reciprocal lattice spacing ∝ 1/d.

So:

  • large unit cell β†’ dense diffraction spots
  • small cell β†’ sparse pattern

Mathematical relationships between real and reciprocal axes shown (page 34).


βšͺ 23. Ewald sphere

Virtual sphere of radius 1/Ξ».

Reflection occurs when reciprocal lattice point lies on sphere.

This explains:

  • why crystal must rotate during data collection.

🌊 24. Fourier theory and wave addition

Structure factor:

F = sum F_j e^{iphi_j}

Meaning:

  • Diffraction depends on amplitude AND phase.

πŸ“Œ Phase problem = major challenge in crystallography.

Fourier theorem:

Any periodic function = sum of simple waves.

Electron density map obtained via Fourier transform of diffraction data.


βš›οΈ 25. Atomic scattering factors & B-factor

  • heavier atoms scatter more
  • scattering decreases at high angles

Debye-Waller factor:

T = e^{-B(sin heta/lambda)^2}

B-factor:

  • measures atomic motion/disorder
  • typical range 2–200 Γ…Β²

⭐ Final Key Takeaways

βœ” Crystal = repeating unit cells βœ” Diffraction pattern encodes structure βœ” Bragg’s law links angle β†’ resolution βœ” Fourier transform converts diffraction β†’ electron density βœ” Symmetry + space group define crystal βœ” Cryo-cooling protects crystal βœ” High-quality purification & crystallization are critical

Quiz

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