Search results for "Molecular replacement"

showing 7 items of 7 documents

Structural basis for light control of cell development revealed by crystal structures of a myxobacterial phytochrome

2018

Phytochromes are red-light photoreceptors that were first characterized in plants, with homologs in photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic bacteria known as bacteriophytochromes (BphPs). Upon absorption of light, BphPs interconvert between two states denoted Pr and Pfr with distinct absorption spectra in the red and far-red. They have recently been engineered as enzymatic photoswitches for fluorescent-marker applications in non-invasive tissue imaging of mammals. This article presents cryo- and room-temperature crystal structures of the unusual phytochrome from the non-photosynthetic myxobacterium Stigmatella aurantiaca (SaBphP1) and reveals its role in the fruiting-body formation of this ph…

MODULE0301 basic medicinePHOTOACTIVE YELLOW PROTEINSIGNALING MECHANISMabsorption spectraMutantfotobiologiaphytochromesBiochemistryyhteyttäminenbakteeritSTIGMATELLA-AURANTIACA03 medical and health sciencesFRUITING BODY FORMATIONGeneral Materials ScienceMolecular replacementStigmatella aurantiacalcsh:ScienceUNUSUAL BACTERIOPHYTOCHROMEPHOTOCONVERSIONHistidine030102 biochemistry & molecular biologybiologyPhytochromeChemistryCRYSTALLOGRAPHYta1182photosynthetic bacteriaphotoreceptorsGeneral ChemistryChromophoreCondensed Matter Physicsbiology.organism_classification030104 developmental biologyCHROMOPHORE-BINDING DOMAINBiophysicsmyxobacterialcsh:Q3111 BiomedicinePhotosynthetic bacteriaproteiinitMOLECULAR REPLACEMENTBinding domainIUCrJ
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Experiences with applications of macromolecular tools in supramolecular crystallography

2014

Supramolecular structures, with ever increasing size ranging from a few up to tens of nanometres, represent an intermediate stage between small molecules and biological macromolecules. Many crystal structures of these large supramolecular assemblies have been solved using dual space algorithms. However, supramolecular assemblies with a capsular shape present a particular challenge for crystallography, especially when they are chiral and composed of only light atoms. In this paper, we show that the application of “routine” macromolecular tools may be of great help in solving the crystal structures of supramolecular assemblies that are otherwise refractory to the routine methods of small mole…

Materials sciencetechnology industry and agricultureSupramolecular chemistryNanotechnologyGeneral ChemistryCrystal structureCondensed Matter PhysicsPhaserSmall moleculeSupramolecular assemblyCrystallographyGeneral Materials ScienceMolecular replacementRoot-mean-square deviationta116MacromoleculeCrystEngcomm
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The use of low-resolution phasing followed by phase extension from 7.6 to 2.5 Å resolution with noncrystallographic symmetry to solve the structure o…

2011

P2, the major capsid protein of bacteriophage PM2, adopts the double β-barrel fold characteristic of the PRD1-adenoviral lineage. The 2.5 Å resolution X-ray data obtained by analysis of the two major lattices of a multiple crystal of P2 were phased by molecular replacement, using as a search model structure factors to 7.6 Å resolution obtained from electron density cut from the map of the entire PM2 virion. Phase extension to 2.5 Å resolution used solely sixfold cycling averaging and solvent flattening. This represents an atypical example of an oligomeric protein for which the structure has been determined at high resolution by bootstrapping from low-resolution initial phases.

Models Molecular0303 health sciencesElectron densitybiologyLow resolution030303 biophysicsGeneral MedicineCrystallography X-Raybiology.organism_classificationBacteriophage PM2PhaserFlatteningProtein Structure TertiaryBacteriophage03 medical and health sciencesCrystallographyCapsidStructural BiologyBacteriophagesCapsid ProteinsMolecular replacementProtein Structure Quaternary030304 developmental biologyActa Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography
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Protein NMR Structures Refined with Rosetta Have Higher Accuracy Relative to Corresponding X-ray Crystal Structures

2014

We have found that refinement of protein NMR structures using Rosetta with experimental NMR restraints yields more accurate protein NMR structures than those that have been deposited in the PDB using standard refinement protocols. Using 40 pairs of NMR and X-ray crystal structures determined by the Northeast Structural Genomics Consortium, for proteins ranging in size from 5-22 kDa, restrained Rosetta refined structures fit better to the raw experimental data, are in better agreement with their X-ray counterparts, and have better phasing power compared to conventionally determined NMR structures. For 37 proteins for which NMR ensembles were available and which had similar structures in solu…

Models MolecularChemistryProtein ConformationProtein Data Bank (RCSB PDB)X-rayProteinsGeneral ChemistryNuclear magnetic resonance crystallographyCrystal structureCrystallography X-RayBiochemistryCatalysisArticleStructural genomicsCrystalCrystallographyColloid and Surface ChemistryMolecular replacementComputer SimulationNuclear Magnetic Resonance BiomolecularSoftwareJournal of the American Chemical Society
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Crystallization and Preliminary Analysis of Crystals of the 24-Meric Hemocyanin of the Emperor Scorpion (Pandinus imperator)

2011

Hemocyanins are giant oxygen transport proteins found in the hemolymph of several invertebrate phyla. They constitute giant multimeric molecules whose size range up to that of cell organelles such as ribosomes or even small viruses. Oxygen is reversibly bound by hemocyanins at binuclear copper centers. Subunit interactions within the multisubunit hemocyanin complex lead to diverse allosteric effects such as the highest cooperativity for oxygen binding found in nature. Crystal structures of a native hemocyanin oligomer larger than a hexameric substructure have not been published until now. We report for the first time growth and preliminary analysis of crystals of the 24-meric hemocyanin (M(…

Models MolecularSciencemedicine.medical_treatmentProtein subunitBiophysicsElectronschemical and pharmacologic phenomenaCooperativityBiologyCrystallography X-RayBiochemistrycomplex mixtures570 Life sciencesArthropod ProteinsScorpionsPandinusHemolymphMacromolecular Structure AnalysismedicineAnimalsMolecular replacementProtein Structure QuaternaryBiologyMultidisciplinaryQROxygen transportProteinsComputational BiologyHemocyaninAnatomybiology.organism_classificationCrystallographyHemocyaninsMedicineProtein MultimerizationCrystallizationOxygen binding570 BiowissenschaftenResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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Crystal structure of bacteriophage fr capsids at 3.5 A resolution.

1994

The structure of recombinant capsids of the bacterial virus fr has been determined by X-ray crystallography at 3.5 A resolution. The capsids were produced by expressing the fr coat protein in Escherichia coli, the natural host of the virus, and are probably essentially identical to the protein shell of the native virus. The structure was determined using molecular replacement with the protein shell of the related MS2 virus, and refined to a crystallographic R-factor of 0.228. A comparison of the protein shells of the viruses shows that they are very similar, and indicates that they may have a similar regulation of the assembly of the quasi-symmetrical protein shell.

Protein ConformationvirusesMolecular Sequence DataRNA PhagesBiologymedicine.disease_causeCrystallography X-RayViruslaw.inventionBacteriophageCapsidStructural BiologylawmedicineComputer GraphicsEscherichia coliMolecular replacementAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyEscherichia coliConserved SequenceLevivirusResolution (electron density)biology.organism_classificationRecombinant ProteinsCrystallographyCapsidMutationBiophysicsRecombinant DNABacterial virusSequence AlignmentJournal of molecular biology
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Crystal structure of the bifunctional soybean Bowman-Birk inhibitor at 0.28-nm resolution. Structural peculiarities in a folded protein conformation.

1996

The Bowman-Birk inhibitor from soybean is a small protein that contains a binary arrangement of trypsin-reactive and chymotrypsin-reactive subdomains. In this report, the crystal structure of this anticarcinogenic protein has been determined to 0.28-nm resolution by molecular replacement from crystals grown at neutral pH. The crystal structure differs from a previously determined NMR structure [Werner, M. H. & Wemmer, D. E. (1992) Biochemistry 31, 999-1010] in the relative orientation of the two enzyme-insertion loops, in some details of the main chain trace, in the presence of favourable contacts in the trypsin-insertion loop, and in the orientation of several amino acid side chains. The p…

chemistry.chemical_classificationModels MolecularMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyStereochemistryProtein ConformationMolecular Sequence DataWaterCrystal structureCrystallography X-RayBiochemistryProtein tertiary structureProtein Structure SecondaryAmino acidCrystallographychemistry.chemical_compoundKineticsProtein structurechemistrySide chainChymotrypsinProtein foldingMolecular replacementAmino Acid SequenceBifunctionalTrypsin Inhibitor Bowman-Birk SoybeanEuropean journal of biochemistry
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