Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




New crystallization method to ease study of protein structures

TheAllINeed.com
(NC&T/ANL) In order to study protein structures, biologists must turn what is essentially a soup of purified protein into crystals that have a consistent and ordered structure. Each protein consists of a chain of amino acid subunits that twists into helices, ribbons and loops. Some proteins have less tidy molecular structures than others; in these, disordered amino acid chains dangle off the protein like split ends.

Crystallizing proteins that contain many of these flexible regions takes much more work and patience than working with more organized ones, said Argonne senior biologist Andrzej Joachimiak, who led the Argonne research effort. "We've tried to find a way to remove the disordered parts using computer modeling, but that's been a challenging process," he said. "This new experimental method is fast, inexpensive and can be applied to many different targets, from bacterial pathogens to human proteins."

In order to try to boost the efficiency of the crystallization process, Joachimiak and his colleagues at the MCSG and SGC inserted a protease—a certain type of enzyme that breaks down the bonds that connect a protein's amino acids.

Once added, the protease preferentially bound to the proteins at the disordered regions, snipping off the loose ends like a molecular barber. The researchers successfully crystallized and examined nine of these newly shorn proteins that previously had resisted attempts to study them using X-ray crystallography.

"This simple technique offers an opportunity to uncover and characterize the structures of dozens of proteins that up until now we had to study using much more laborious and expensive approaches," Joachimiak said.

Ribbon representation of NE2398, a protein from the Nitrosomonas europaea bacterium. Dotted lines represent the parts of the protein digested with protease. Blue molecules represent other molecules in the crystal lattice. (Photo: ANL)
This process, known as "limited in situ proteolysis," represents one of several potential "salvage pathways" that biophysicists could use to create more usable protein crystals and reduce waste, Joachimiak said. Currently, scientists' efforts to manufacture and then study a workable crystal on Argonne's Advanced Photon Source yield structural data only about 15 percent of the time. By using proteases to digest part of the protein sample, the Argonne scientists achieved a six percent boost in efficiency.

Joachimiak cautioned that scientists do not have a way to successfully crystallize every protein, even with the use of proteolysis. "There will still be some that are resistant," he admitted, "but we are making enormous strides in our understanding of how exactly these essential substances work."


About the Author
©2006 All rights reserved

More articles
Color-coding atoms
Solar cell performance
Researchers discover the structural alphabet of RNA
Converting waste to electricity
New material
Primordial soup
Carbon dioxide capture
'Artificial photosynthesis'
Shell shock
New crystallization method to ease study of protein structures
Diamonds help jet engines
Control particle motion
Carbon dioxide in plants
'Two-faced' particles
Next generation rubber
The future of computing
Spider silk's strength
Buckyballs squeeze hydrogen
Hybrid computer materials
Silicon circuits
Quotes
By convention!
cussed Tom airily.

Cmon Scully... Itll be a nice trip through the woods-Fox Mulder

But what ... is it good for?
Engineer at IBM, 1968, commenting on the microchip.


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info
Today...
In the news...
Unlawful killings continue at heavy rate in Afghanistan, UN rights expert says
The Taliban and other anti-Government elements are responsible for the majority of the unlawful killings, he said, with their routine suicide attacks and targeted assassinations.
What are the advantages for shopping online?
No waiting in lines and less hassle
No price discrepancy with incorrect pricing
Comfortness of shopping without leaving home
24 Hours Shopping
Convience of comparison shopping
Other
 
Things to ponder
When sign makers go on strike, is there anything written on their signs?

Did you know...
A regular hen's egg has about 7,000 tiny pores in its shell.

Quote of the day
Truly great madness cannot be achieved without significant intelligence.
Henrik Tikkanen

Featured article
Makeup Minimalist
There are a few exotically beautiful women in the world that can pull off "the absolutely no make-up" look, but most of us can benefit from a bit of polish.

 
© 2002 - 2007 Lexur