Description
In the past decade, technological breakthroughs have facilitated structure determination of so many difficult-to-study membrane protein targets. In this thesis research, three techniques were investigated to enable the structural determination of such challenging targets, polychromatic pink-beam serial crystallography with high-viscous sample, lipidic cubic phase (LCP)-based microcrystal electron diffraction (MicroED), and single-particle cryogenic electron microscopy targeting (cryoEM).
Inspired by the successful serial crystallography (SX) experiment at a synchrotron radiation source, it is first-time equipping the high-viscosity injector to X-ray fluxes increased at 100 times by a moderate increased in bandwidth to perform the pink beam SX experiments. The structure of proteinase K (PK) was determined to 1.8 Å resolution with 4 consecutive 100 ps X-ray pink beam pulse exposures. The structure of human A2A adenosine receptor (A2AAR) reached to a 4.2 Å resolution using 24 consecutive X-ray pink beam pulse exposures. It has proven the feasibility to utilize such storage-ring synchrotron sources complemented to serial femtosecond crystallography, presenting new opportunities for microcrystallography and the time-resolved experiments.
As an alternative approach to serial femtosecond crystallography, a novel protocol was developed to combine the lipidic cubic phase crystallization approach and microED strategy and solved the structure from LCP-embedded proteinase K microcrystals with the comparable high resolution to conventional crystallographic method.
It cannot be neglected that only very few portions of membrane proteins were able to be successfully crystallized for structure determination. Single particle cryoEM method allows the structural studies from protein molecules detour away from crystallization. An atomic resolution structure of the β1-AR bound with agonist in complex with Gs protein, with particle size of less than 200 kDa, was determined by cryoEM, reaching to an atomic resolution of 3.8 Å. The complex structure captured a fully active conformation and revealed the important mechanisms of how the agonist bound receptor activated Gs protein.
These technological developments provide more opportunities to the structural biology community to discover mechanisms underlying such complicated machinery network, which would eventually benefit the structure-based drug discovery.
Inspired by the successful serial crystallography (SX) experiment at a synchrotron radiation source, it is first-time equipping the high-viscosity injector to X-ray fluxes increased at 100 times by a moderate increased in bandwidth to perform the pink beam SX experiments. The structure of proteinase K (PK) was determined to 1.8 Å resolution with 4 consecutive 100 ps X-ray pink beam pulse exposures. The structure of human A2A adenosine receptor (A2AAR) reached to a 4.2 Å resolution using 24 consecutive X-ray pink beam pulse exposures. It has proven the feasibility to utilize such storage-ring synchrotron sources complemented to serial femtosecond crystallography, presenting new opportunities for microcrystallography and the time-resolved experiments.
As an alternative approach to serial femtosecond crystallography, a novel protocol was developed to combine the lipidic cubic phase crystallization approach and microED strategy and solved the structure from LCP-embedded proteinase K microcrystals with the comparable high resolution to conventional crystallographic method.
It cannot be neglected that only very few portions of membrane proteins were able to be successfully crystallized for structure determination. Single particle cryoEM method allows the structural studies from protein molecules detour away from crystallization. An atomic resolution structure of the β1-AR bound with agonist in complex with Gs protein, with particle size of less than 200 kDa, was determined by cryoEM, reaching to an atomic resolution of 3.8 Å. The complex structure captured a fully active conformation and revealed the important mechanisms of how the agonist bound receptor activated Gs protein.
These technological developments provide more opportunities to the structural biology community to discover mechanisms underlying such complicated machinery network, which would eventually benefit the structure-based drug discovery.
Details
Title
- Technological development to reveal structural and mechanistic insights into membrane proteins
Contributors
- Zhu, Lan, Ph.D (Author)
- Liu, Wei (Thesis advisor)
- Mills, Jeremy (Committee member)
- Stephanopoulos, Nicholas (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2019
Subjects
Resource Type
Collections this item is in
Note
- thesisPartial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2019
- bibliographyIncludes bibliographical references
- Field of study: Biochemistry
Citation and reuse
Statement of Responsibility
by Lan Zhu