학술논문

Resonant Soft X-Ray Scattering Provides Protein Structure with Chemical Specificity
Document Type
article
Source
Structure. 26(11)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Chemical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Generic health relevance
Animals
Cattle
Models
Molecular
Protein Conformation
Serum Albumin
Bovine
X-Ray Diffraction
NEXAFS
RSoXS
SAXS
envelope function
protein structure
small-angle scattering
soft X-rays
Information and Computing Sciences
Biophysics
Biological sciences
Chemical sciences
Language
Abstract
We introduce resonant soft X-ray scattering (RSoXS) as an approach to study the structure of proteins and other biological molecules in solution. Scattering contrast calculations suggest that RSoXS has comparable or even higher sensitivity than hard X-ray scattering because of contrast generated at the absorption edges of constituent elements, such as carbon and oxygen. Here, we demonstrate that working near the carbon edge reveals the envelope function of bovine serum albumin, using scattering volumes of 10-5 μL that are multiple orders of magnitude lower than traditional scattering experiments. Furthermore, tuning the X-ray energy within the carbon absorption edge provides different signatures of the size and shape of the protein by revealing the density of different types of bonding motifs within the protein. The combination of chemical specificity, smaller sample size, and enhanced X-ray contrast will propel RSoXS as a complementary tool to existing techniques for the study of biomolecular structure.