학술논문

High-resolution neutron protein crystallography with radically small crystal volumes: application of perdeuteration to human aldose reductase.
Document Type
Article
Source
Acta Crystallographica: Section D (Wiley-Blackwell). Oct2005, Vol. 61 Issue 10, p1413-1417. 5p.
Subject
*ALDOSE reductase
*CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
*OXIDOREDUCTASES
*ENZYMES
*CATALYSTS
*PROTEINS
Language
ISSN
0907-4449
Abstract
Neutron diffraction data have been collected to 2.2 Å resolution from a small (0.15 mm³) crystal of perdeuterated human aldose reductase (h-AR; MW = 36 kDa) in order to help to determine the protonation state of the enzyme. h-AR belongs to the aldo-keto reductase family and is implicated in diabetic complications. Its ternary complexes (h-AR-co- enzyme NADPH-selected inhibitor) provide a good model to study both the enzymatic mechanism and inhibition. Here, the successful production of fully deuterated human aldose reductase [h-AR(D)], subsequent crystallization of the ternary complex h-AR(D)-NADPH-1DD594 and neutron Laue data collection at the LADI instrument at ILL using a crystal volume of just 0.15 mm³ are reported. Neutron data were recorded to 2 Å resolution, with subsequent data analysis using data to 2.2 Å. This is the first fully deuterated enzyme of this size (36 kDa) to be solved by neutron diffraction and represents a milestone in the field, as the crystal volume is at least one order of magnitude smaller than those usually required for other high-resolution neutron structures determined to date. This illustrates the significant increase in the signal-to-noise ratio of data collected from perdeuterated crystals and demonstrates that good-quality neutron data can now be collected from more typical protein crystal volumes. Indeed, the signal-to-noise ratio is then dominated by other sources of instrument background, the nature of which is under investigation. This is important for the design of future instruments, which should take maximum advantage of the reduction in the intrinsic diffraction pattern background from fully deuterated samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]