| Robust, High-Throughput Analysis of Protein Structures |
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| Wednesday, 28 October 2009 00:00 | ||||
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Scientists have developed a fast and efficient way to determine the structure of proteins, shortening a process that often takes years into a matter of days. The Structurally Integrated BiologY for Life Sciences (SIBYLS) beamline at the ALS has implemented the world's highest-throughput biological-solution x-ray scattering beamline enabling genomic-scale protein-structure characterization. Coupling brilliant x rays from one of the superconducting bend magnets at the ALS to liquid-handling robotics has enabled the collection of 96 samples in 4 hours. Importantly, the sample format and the amount of material required are practical for most biological problems. The beamline's high-throughput capability is set to have a large impact on many fields that require genomic-scale information, such as Berkeley Lab's bioenergy efforts and cancer biology studies.
The high flux, brilliance, and focus of the x rays from ALS Beamline 12.3.1 are ideal for high-throughput, time-resolved experiments that cannot be replicated using in-house light sources. The SIBYLS team used a technique called small-angle x-ray scattering (SAXS) to image proteins in their natural state, such as in a solution, and at a resolution of about 10 angstroms, enough to determine three-dimensional shape. Although x-ray crystallography yields higher-resolution images, SAXS makes up for what it lacks in precision by providing fast, accurate information on the shape, assembly, and conformational changes of proteins. Also, by studying protein crystals in solution, smaller protein crystals of any shape can be analyzed and radiation damage is significantly reduced, making the technique practical for almost any biomolecule. Because of the high throughput rate, the bottlenecks in the process occur during sample transfer, washing, and data analysis rather than data collection. To maximize speed, a robot automatically pipettes protein samples into position and supercomputer clusters analyze the resulting data. In this work, the researchers reported the results of 50 purified proteins analyzed over a period of 2 weeks. The 50 proteins were mostly from a single organism that has a total of 2000 genes. With the demonstrated throughput, 2000 proteins would be completed in a year and a half. The shape and assembly were reported for over 80% of the samples analyzed. Aside from the record-breaking throughput, several additional important results were obtained from this study. Twelve proteins with no previous structural information were solved to 1.5-nm resolution. Over 50% of the proteins studied were multimeric (formed complexes of dimers and trimers, etc.). This finding underscores the importance of multimerization, as several multimeric states had been characterized incorrectly by other techniques. Finally, while genomics enables the quantification of the number of proteins an organism contains, identifying what each protein actually does is very challenging. A significant fraction of known proteins remain mysterious in terms of function. By comparing a protein's measured SAXS profile like a fingerprint to those calculated from existing available structures with known function, the researchers could obtain important clues to the purpose of the unknown protein.
The SIBYLS beamline's success relies on applying SAXS to focused biological problems. Current directions include the analysis of DNA repair pathways, which, if malfunctioning, are a leading cause of cancer. An equally important focus is on bioenergy production through the understanding of metabolic pathways in organisms capable of living in extreme industrial environments such as high temperature, salt,or pH. These organisms contain novel proteins that, for example, create hydrogen, a potential alternative fuel, as a by-product. In general, SAXS can quickly provide information at resolutions often sufficient for functional insights into how proteins work. With the number of genes being identified growing at a high rate, high-throughput SAXS helps us keep pace and is an enabling technology that may change the way that structural genomics research is done.
Research conducted by G.L. Hura, M. Hammel, R.P. Rambo, S.E. Tsutakawa, S. Classen, and K.A. Frankel (Berkeley Lab); A.L. Menon, F.L. Poole II, F.E. Jenney Jr., R.C. Hopkins, S.-J. Yang, J.W. Scott, B.D. Dillard, and M.W.W. Adams (University of Georgia); and J.A. Tainer (The Scripps Research Institute and Berkeley Lab). Research Funding: National Institutes of Health and U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Offices of Biological and Environmental Research, Advanced Scientific Computing, and Basic Energy Sciences (BES). Operation of the ALS is supported by DOE BES. Publication about this research: G.L. Hura, A.L. Menon, M. Hammel, R.P. Rambo, F.L. Poole II, S.E. Tsutakawa, F.E. Jenney Jr, S. Classen, K.A. Frankel, R.C. Hopkins, S.-J. Yang, J.W. Scott, B.D. Dillard, M.W.W. Adams, and J.A. Tainer, "Robust, high-throughput solution structural analyses by small angle x-ray scattering (SAXS)," Nat. Methods 6, 606 (2009).
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