Protein nanocrystallography, a new technology for crystal growth based on protein nanotemplates, has recently been shown to produce diffracting, stable and radiation-resistant lysozyme crystals. This article, by computing these lysozyme crystals' atomic structures, obtained by the diffraction patterns of microfocused synchrotron radiation, provides a possible mechanism for this increased stability, namely a significant decrease in water content accompanied by a minor but significant α-helix increase. These data are shown to be compatible with the circular dichroism and two-dimensional Fourier transform spectra of high-resolution H NMR of proteins dissolved from the same nanotemplate-based crystal versus those from a classical crystal. Finally, evidence for protein direct transfer from the nanotemplate to the drop and the participation of the template proteins in crystal nucleation and growth is provided by high-resolution NMR spectrometry and mass spectrometry. Furthermore, the lysozyme nanotemplate appears stable up to 523 K, as confirmed by a thermal denaturation study using spectropolarimetry. The overall data suggest that heat-proof lysozyme presence in the crystal provides a possible explanation of the crystal's resistance to synchrotron radiation. © 2005 International Union of Crystallography Printed in Great Britain - all rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Pechkova, E., Vasile, F., Spera, R., Fiordoro, S., & Nicolini, C. (2005). Protein nanocrystallography: Growth mechanism and atomic structure of crystals induced by nanotemplates. In Journal of Synchrotron Radiation (Vol. 12, pp. 772–778). https://doi.org/10.1107/S0909049505011647
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