Macromolecular crystallography is a powerful tool for structural biology. The resolution of a protein crystal structure is becoming much easier than in the past, thanks to developments in computing, automation of crystallization techniques and high-flux synchrotron sources to collect diffraction datasets. The aim of this chapter is to provide practical procedures to determine a protein crystal structure, illustrating the new techniques, experimental methods, and software that have made protein crystallography a tool accessible to a larger scientific community. It is impossible to give more than a taste of what the X-ray crystallographic technique entails in one brief chapter and there are different ways to solve a protein structure. Since the number of structures available in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) is becoming ever larger (the protein data bank now contains more than 100,000 entries) and therefore the probability to find a good model to solve the structure is ever increasing, we focus our attention on the Molecular Replacement method. Indeed, whenever applicable, this method allows the resolution of macromolecular structures starting from a single data set and a search model downloaded from the PDB, with the aid only of computer work.
CITATION STYLE
Ilari, A., & Savino, C. (2017). A practical approach to protein crystallography. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1525, pp. 47–78). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-6622-6_3
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