Thông tin tài liệu
Nhan đề : | Subnanometer-resolution structure determination in situ by a hybrid subtomogram averaging – single particle cryoEM – workflow |
Tác giả : | Sanchez, Ricardo Zhang, Yingyi Chen, Wenbo |
Từ khoá : | (StA; CTF |
Năm xuất bản : | 2020 |
Nhà xuất bản : | Biochemical Journal |
Tóm tắt : | Cryo electron tomography (cryo-ET) combined with subtomogram averaging (StA) enables structural determination of macromolecules in their native context. A few structures were reported by StA at resolution higher than 4.5 Å, however all of these are from viral structural proteins or vesicle coats. Reaching high resolution for a broader range of samples is uncommon due to beam-induced sample drift, poor signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of images, challenges in CTF correction, limited number of particles. Here we propose a strategy to address these issues, which consists of a tomographic data collection scheme and a processing workflow. Tilt series are collected with higher electron dose at zero-degree tilt in order to increase SNR. Next, after performing StA conventionally, we extract 2D projections of the particles of interest from the higher SNR images and use the single particle analysis tools to refine the particle alignment and generate a reconstruction. We benchmarked our proposed hybrid StA (hStA) workflow and improved the resolution for tobacco mosaic virus from 7.2 to 5.2 Å and the resolution for the ion channel RyR1 in crowded native membranes from 12.9 to 9.1 Å. We demonstrate that hStA can improve the resolution obtained by conventional StA and promises to be a useful tool for StA projects aiming at subnanometer resolution or higher. |
Mô tả: | Tài liệu này được phát hành theo giấy phép CC-BY-ND 4.0 |
URI: | http://dlib.hust.edu.vn/handle/HUST/24393 |
Liên kết tài liệu gốc: | https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.04.24.057299v1 |
Trong bộ sưu tập: | OER - Kỹ thuật hóa học; Công nghệ sinh học - Thực phẩm; Công nghệ môi trường |
XEM MÔ TẢ
38
XEM & TẢI
9
Danh sách tệp tin đính kèm:
Tài liệu được cấp phép theo Bản quyền Creative Commons