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A multi-crystal method for extracting obscured crystallographic states from conventionally uninterpretable electron density

Author

Listed:
  • Nicholas M. Pearce

    (Structural Genomics Consortium, University of Oxford)

  • Tobias Krojer

    (Structural Genomics Consortium, University of Oxford)

  • Anthony R. Bradley

    (Structural Genomics Consortium, University of Oxford)

  • Patrick Collins

    (Diamond Light Source Ltd, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus)

  • Radosław P. Nowak

    (Structural Genomics Consortium, University of Oxford)

  • Romain Talon

    (Structural Genomics Consortium, University of Oxford)

  • Brian D. Marsden

    (Structural Genomics Consortium, University of Oxford
    Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences, University of Oxford)

  • Sebastian Kelm

    (UCB Pharma)

  • Jiye Shi

    (UCB Pharma)

  • Charlotte M. Deane

    (University of Oxford)

  • Frank von Delft

    (Structural Genomics Consortium, University of Oxford
    Diamond Light Source Ltd, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus
    University of Johannesburg)

Abstract

In macromolecular crystallography, the rigorous detection of changed states (for example, ligand binding) is difficult unless signal is strong. Ambiguous (‘weak’ or ‘noisy’) density is experimentally common, since molecular states are generally only fractionally present in the crystal. Existing methodologies focus on generating maximally accurate maps whereby minor states become discernible; in practice, such map interpretation is disappointingly subjective, time-consuming and methodologically unsound. Here we report the PanDDA method, which automatically reveals clear electron density for the changed state—even from inaccurate maps—by subtracting a proportion of the confounding ‘ground state’; changed states are objectively identified from statistical analysis of density distributions. The method is completely general, implying new best practice for all changed-state studies, including the routine collection of multiple ground-state crystals. More generally, these results demonstrate: the incompleteness of atomic models; that single data sets contain insufficient information to model them fully; and that accuracy requires further map-deconvolution approaches.

Suggested Citation

  • Nicholas M. Pearce & Tobias Krojer & Anthony R. Bradley & Patrick Collins & Radosław P. Nowak & Romain Talon & Brian D. Marsden & Sebastian Kelm & Jiye Shi & Charlotte M. Deane & Frank von Delft, 2017. "A multi-crystal method for extracting obscured crystallographic states from conventionally uninterpretable electron density," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 8(1), pages 1-8, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:8:y:2017:i:1:d:10.1038_ncomms15123
    DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15123
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