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Quantifying X-ray radiation damage in protein crystals at cryogenic temperatures

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)

Author

J. Kmetko
N.S. Husseini
M. Naides
Y. Kalinin
R.E. Thorne

Abstract

The dependence of radiation damage to protein crystals at cryogenic temperatures upon the X-ray absorption cross-section of the crystal has been examined. Lysozyme crystals containing varying heavy-atom concentrations were irradiated and diffraction patterns were recorded as a function of the total number of incident photons. An experimental protocol and a coefficient of sensitivity to absorbed dose, proportional to the change in relative isotropic B factor, are defined that together yield a sensitive and robust measure of damage. Radiation damage per incident photon increases linearly with the absorption coefficient of the crystal, but damage per absorbed photon is the same for all heavy-atom concentrations. Similar damage per absorbed photon is observed for crystals of three proteins with different molecular sizes and solvent contents. © 2006 International Union of Crystallography - all rights reserved.

Date Published

Journal

Acta Crystallographica Section D: Biological Crystallography

Volume

62

Issue

9

Number of Pages

1030-1038,

URL

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33748353816&doi=10.1107%2fS0907444906023869&partnerID=40&md5=e76e07555f32e732922f221547d50e11

DOI

10.1107/S0907444906023869

Research Area

Group (Lab)

Robert Thorne Group

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