Abstract
The study of temperature-dependent physical changes in flash-cooled macromolecular crystals is pertinent to cryocrystallography and related issues such as crystal annealing, X-ray radiation damage and kinetic crystallography. In this context, the unit-cell volume of flash-cooled trigonal and orthorhombic trypsin crystals has been monitored upon warming from 100 to 200 K and subsequent re-cooling to 100 K. Crystals of both forms were obtained under the same crystallization conditions, yet they differ in solvent content and channel size. An abrupt non-reversible unit-cell volume decrease is observed at 185 K in orthorhombic and at 195 K in trigonal crystals as the temperature is increased; this result is consistent with ultra-viscous solvent leaving the crystals. Concomitant appearance of ice rings in the diffraction patterns suggests that the transported solvent forms crystalline ice. These results demonstrate that solvent in flash-cooled protein crystals is liquid-like near its crystallization temperature, as has been proposed, yet controversially discussed, for the case of pure water. The use of mineral oil prevents the unit-cell volume decrease in trigonal but not in orthorhombic crystals. The observation of liquid-like solvent has implications in the development of annealing protocols and points a way to the rational design of temperature-controlled crystallographic studies that aim either at studying specific radiation damage or at trapping enzymatic intermediate states. © 2005 International Union of Crystallography Printed in Great Britain - all rights reserved.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Weik, M., Schreurs, A. M. M., Leiros, H. K. S., Zaccai, G., Ravelli, R. B. G., & Gros, P. (2005). Supercooled liquid-like solvent in trypsin crystals: Implications for crystal annealing and temperature-controlled X-ray radiation damage studies. Journal of Synchrotron Radiation, 12(3), 310–317. https://doi.org/10.1107/S0909049505003316
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.