Dynamic 3D visualization of active protein′s motion using diffracted X-ray tracking

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Abstract

Diffracted X-ray tracking (DXT) is one of the single-molecule techniques for investigating intra-molecule dynamics of functional proteins at the single-molecule level with nanocrystal and synchrotron X-ray. In DXT, a nanocrystal is immobilized on a target protein, used as a motion probe and the trajectory of its diffraction spot is analyzed as the internal motion of the protein. It can detect atomic-scale dynamic motion of the protein with several tens of microseconds time resolution. Therefore, DXT is expected to be a powerful tool to investigate protein inter-molecule dynamics, especially for cooperative motion analysis in multimeric proteins. In this article, we review the characteristic features and recent progress of DXT.

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Sekiguchi, H., & Sasaki, Y. C. (2019). Dynamic 3D visualization of active protein′s motion using diffracted X-ray tracking. Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, 58(12). https://doi.org/10.7567/1347-4065/ab56fd

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