Rapid and efficient room-temperature serial synchrotron crystallography using the CFEL TapeDrive

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Abstract

Serial crystallography at conventional synchrotron light sources (SSX) offers the possibility to routinely collect data at room temperature using micrometre-sized crystals of biological macromolecules. However, SSX data collection is not yet as routine and currently takes significantly longer than the standard rotation series cryo-crystallography. Thus, its use for high-throughput approaches, such as fragment-based drug screening, where the possibility to measure at physiological temperatures would be a great benefit, is impaired. On the way to high-throughput SSX using a conveyor belt based sample delivery system – the CFEL TapeDrive – with three different proteins of biological relevance (Klebsiella pneumoniae CTX-M-14-lactamase, Nectria haematococca xylanase GH11 and Aspergillus flavus urate oxidase), it is shown here that complete datasets can be collected in less than a minute and only minimal amounts of sample are required.

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Zielinski, K. A., Prester, A., Andaleeb, H., Bui, S., Yefanov, O., Catapano, L., … Oberthuer, D. (2022). Rapid and efficient room-temperature serial synchrotron crystallography using the CFEL TapeDrive. IUCrJ, 9(6), 778–791. https://doi.org/10.1107/S2052252522010193

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