BL9-2

First Atomic Structure of an Intact Polyketide Synthase Revealing Two Asynchronous Reaction Chambers

April 14, 2022

Polyketides are a diverse and important category of molecules with various functions including antibiotic, immunosuppressant, and antitumor. Some polyketides have great medical and economic value. One type of polyketide synthase (PKS), the enzymes that make polyketides, is called type I modular PKS.

X-ray Crystallography-derived Conformational Ensembles to Better Understand Enzyme Catalysis

July 31, 2021

Enzymes’ ability to speed biochemical reaction rates is the core of life processes, and much of molecular life science research involves understanding how an enzyme’s structure (often found through x-ray crystallography or NMR) is related to its function (biochemical analyses of the reaction). Pinpointing the 3D arrangement of atoms in the active site of an enzyme gives insight into the reaction intermediates and energetics, but may be conceptually misleading since enzymes, like all molecules, are constantly in motion

The Making of an Enzyme-in-Action Movie

October 31, 2020

The enzyme 3-Hydroxyanthranilate-3,4-dioxygenase (HAO) is critical for the metabolism of the amino acid tryptophan and the synthesis of the important coenzyme nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+). Although the role of this enzyme has been long known, its mechanism and regulation have remained a mystery, because it is difficult to study. HAO creates the unstable product 2-amino-3-carboxymuconic semialdehyde (ACMS) that can self-cyclize into quinolinic acid (QUIN). Because excess amounts of QUIN have been implicated in neurologic diseases, HAO is a potential drug target. A group of scientists have determined the mechanism of the HAO enzyme by applying crystallographic techniques.

Design of Novel Protein Cages

May 31, 2020

Some proteins can form complex cage structures that can trap, hold, catalyze, and release small molecular and atomic cargo based on environmental signals. These protein cages are made of a collection of identical monomer proteins self-assembled into a symmetric conformation. Protein cages are found in nature, including in virus capsids, and have attracted much interest for engineering them to perform specific functions. In the past, designed protein cages have formed highly porous, “wiffle-ball”-like assemblies, but a team of scientists have used knowledge of inorganic chemistry, such as metal-coordination preferences, to design a tightly-packed protein cage that more closely mimics natural protein cages.

Structure of the Full-length Clostridium difficile Toxin B

August 28, 2019

The bacterium Clostridium difficile (often called C. diff) can cause severe intestinal infections, responsible for about 500,000 cases and 29,000 deaths in the United States per year. While infections are more often found in ill and elderly people, infection rates are increasing in young and healthy people. The bacterium makes and secretes two related toxins, TcdA and TcdB. Understanding the structure of these molecules is a critical step to developing treatment. Unfortunately, since these toxin proteins are huge and flexible, scientists have been unable to determine the entire molecular structures until now.

Muscle Disorders at High Resolution: Native American Myopathy and Beyond

March 30, 2018

Imagine being born with severe muscle weakness. Several of your joints are contracted, your spine is abnormally curved, and you have an opening in the roof of your mouth, affecting your hearing, breathing and speech. On top of that, if you undergo surgery, you may die from a serious reaction to the anesthetics that causes your body temperature to rise to lethal levels.  This happens to people that have Native American Myopathy (NAM), a disorder first described for the Lumbee Native Americans in North Carolina, where about 1 in 5000 individuals is affected.

Structures of the CRISPR Genome Integration Complex

August 31, 2017

CRISPR, a powerful new tool that can target and change specific sequences of DNA, is based on a prokaryotic immune system response. The first step of bacterial immunity via CRISPR is placing sequences of foreign (viral) DNA between specific palindromic DNA repeats in the bacterial genome. The enzyme complex Cas1-Cas2 must target the correct DNA locus for integration, since insertion of the viral DNA into other areas of the genome may cause damage to the bacteria.

A New Type of Pilus from the Human Microbiome

July 29, 2016

Many bacteria, including many colonizing our own gut biomes, produce hair-like pili structures on their surfaces. There are various types of pili used for different purposes, like exchanging genetic information (conjugation), movement, and adhesion. A bacterium builds pilus through oligomerization of protein subunits. A group of scientists have determined the structure of a new type of pilus, which they named the type V pilus.

A Designed Supramolecular Protein Assembly with in-Vivo Enzymatic Activity

April 30, 2015

Creating novel enzymes to perform specific chemical reactions is a field of great promise, but it is still in its early stages. Efforts usually involve using well-studied protein structural and functional domains to create new active sites. Scientists have recently developed a different approach, creating the active site in the interface between proteins in a multi-protein complex. They started with a well-researched, natural protein that, in its natural state, does not form complexes with other proteins, and nor does it catalyze the desired reaction.

Structure of the DUF2233 Domain in Bacteria and the Stuttering-associated UCE Glycoprotein

July 31, 2013

UCE plays a key role in the functioning of lysosomes, cellular sacs full of digestive enzymes that break down bacteria, viruses and worn-out cell parts for recycling. When this recycling process goes awry, it can cause rare metabolic diseases such as Tay-Sachs and Gaucher, which often cause death in affected children by their early teens. Three years ago, researchers discovered that three mutations in UCE itself were linked to persistent stuttering that is passed down in families.

Botulinum Neurotoxin is Bio-shielded by NTNHA in a Handshake Complex

October 31, 2012

Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) invade motor neurons at their junctions with muscular tissue, where the toxins disable the release of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine and subsequently paralyze the affected muscles. Accidental BoNT poisoning primarily occurs through ingestion of food products contaminated by Clostridium botulinum, the bacterium that produces BoNTs. However, BoNTs by themselves are fragile and sensitive to low pH environments and digestive proteases. So how do they survive the harsh environment of the host’s gastrointestinal tract?

Folate Binding Site of Flavin-dependant Thymidylate Synthase and the Mechanistic Implications

September 24, 2012

Flavin-dependant thymidylate synthases (FDTSs) are a class of recently identified family of thymidylate synthases that employ novel mechanism for the thymidylate synthase reaction.   Thymidylate synthases use N5,N10-methylene-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrofolate (CH2H4folate) to reductively methylate 2’-deoxyuridine-5’-monophosphate (dUMP) producing 2’-deoxythymine-5’-monophosphate (dTMP).  dTMP is one of the four DNA building blocks and is crucial for survival of all organisms.  Unlike other deoxynucleotides, dTMP cannot be directly synthesized by a ribonucleotide reductase, and its de novo biosynthesis requires the enzyme thymidylate synthase. Therefore, inhibition of thymidylate synthesis stops DNA production, arresting cell cycle and eventually leading to “thymineless” cell death.  The human enzyme has long been recognized as a target for anticancer drugs.

Since FDTS enzymes are mainly found in very pathogenic microbes including the pathogens causing leprosy, botulism, diarrhea, anthrax, pneumonia, syphilis, etc., the FDTS enzyme is an attractive target for antibiotic drugs.

Computational Design of Anti-flu Proteins

August 31, 2012

Understanding the physical underpinnings of how proteins interact specifically with one another and not with the myriad other molecules that coexist in every cellular compartment is a major goal of molecular biology. The broad outlines of an answer were suggested by Linus Pauling in the 1940’s: the aggregate effect of numerous weak and nonspecific van der Waals, hydrogen-bonding, and electrostatic interactions underlie high specificity and affinity. Since Pauling’s days thousands of co-crystal structures have provided concrete examples for how molecular recognition is achieved in different biological contexts. Yet, the ultimate proof for understanding a natural phenomenon lies in recapitulating it; in the words of Thomas Edison, ‘until man duplicates a single blade of grass, Nature laughs at his so-called scientific knowledge’.

Structure of the MTIP-MyoA Complex, a Key Component of the Malaria Parasite Invasion Motor

January 31, 2007

Researchers from the University of Washington working at SSRL have solved the structure of a protein complex that may one day be exploited to combat drug-resistant strands of the parasite that causes malaria, Plasmodium. Malaria, one of the most devastating diseases worldwide, infects 300 to 500 million people and causes about 2 million deaths each year.

High Resolution Structure of the Neisseria gonorrhoeae Type IV Pilus: A Membrane-bound Fibrous Assembly

April 30, 2007

A team of researchers working at SSRL has determined the atomic structure of an assemblage of fiber-forming proteins found in the cell membranes of many dangerous types of bacteria. The protein, called pilin, assembles into filamentous organelles called Type IV pili found on the surfaces of most Gram-negative bacteria. Type IV pili plays a central role in how these bacterial pathogens infect a host and are involved in cellular functions such as motility, adhesion, microcolony formation and uptake of DNA and specific filamentous phage.

Structure of a Putative Metal-Chelate Type ABC Transporter: An Inward-facing Conformation

May 29, 2007

Scientists from Caltech have solved the crystal structure of an ATP-binding Cassette (ABC) transporter called HI1470/1 from the bacteria Haemophilus influenzae. This particular transporter, which is a member of a large family of related proteins prevalent in most organisms including humans, is responsible for moving nutrients across cell membranes. The structure of HI1470/1 exhibits an alternate conformation to that previously observed for the related transporter BtuCD, such that their pathways for moving nutrients open to opposite sides of the membrane. These results give scientists a look at both the beginning and ending stages of how proteins transport nutrients across the membrane bilayers that surround all cells.

High Resolution Snapshots for the Complete Reaction Cycle of a Cocaine Catalytic Antibody

March 27, 2006

Cocaine abuse remains a major public health problem despite ongoing research aimed at developing therapies to counter its harmful effects. Immunopharmacotherapy is one proposed therapy which would block cocaine in the blood stream before it reaches the central nervous system. Cocaine-binding antibodies seem likely candidates for soaking up drugs in the blood stream, but their only binding abilities are not sufficient to withstand high concentrations of the drug. What is needed is a monoclonal antibody with high binding characteristics and sufficient catalytic ability to metabolize cocaine.

Crystal Structure of Iron-dependent Halogenase

June 28, 2006

After years of wondering how organisms managed to create medically valuable natural products, like antibiotics and anti-fungal agents, chemists have discovered the surprisingly simple secret by shining x-ray light on the problem. MIT and Harvard researchers used crystallography beam lines at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory and the Advanced Light Source in Berkeley for their research.

Structural Basis of Transciption: Role of the Trigger Loop in Substrate Specificity and Catalysis

December 19, 2006

Life as we know it depends on turning on and off the proper genes at the correct time. This process of gene expression starts when an RNA message is copied from DNA. Scientists have long known that an enzyme called RNA polymerase II plays the central role in this delicate transcription process. But the exact mechanism by which RNA polymerase II selects specific nucleotides and catalyzes the reaction that incorporates them into a growing RNA strand has not been well understood.

Structural Basis for the Promiscuous Biosynthetic Prenylation of Aromatic Natural Products

July 29, 2005

Using x-ray diffraction data collected on Beam Line 9-2 at SSRL, and other beam lines at the ESRF and BNL, scientists at The Salk Institute for Biological Studies discovered the three-dimensional structure of a protein that bacteria use to make biologically active compounds. By effectively engineering this protein, scientists may be able to create new drugs with therapeutic properties.

Cytoplasmic Domain Structures of Kir2.1 and Kir3.1 Show Sites for Modulating Gating and Rectification

July 29, 2005

Ion channels in our cells generate the nerve impulses that enable the heart to beat, the body to move, and sensation and thought to occur. Scientists from the Salk Institute for Biological Studies have identified a tiny flexible gateway that controls the rapid-fire opening and closing of a family of ion channels through which nerve-triggering potassium ions flow in and out of cells of the body. Malfunctions in the channels leads to several human diseases, including epilepsy, cardiac arrhythmias and muscle disorders.

Structure of the ESCRT-II Endosomal Trafficking Complex

February 28, 2005

The lysosome is the "digestive system" of an animal cell. Molecules taken up from the outside are sent to the lysosome to be broken up into a form that can be safely used by the rest of the cell. A network of membrane vesicles called the endocytic pathway moves cargo destined for the lysosome from the surface of the cell. One of the last steps before the cargo reaches the cell is the pinching-off of small vesicles into the center of a big vesicle.

Substrate Recognition Strategy for Botulinum Neurotoxin Serotype A

December 15, 2004

The Botox® face lifts and botulism disease are both caused by a neurotoxin from the bacterium Clostridium botulinum. The toxin, often described as the most lethal substance known, is a member of the clostridal neurotoxins (CNTs) group, which block muscle contractions. When injected into someone's face, the effect is a lessening of wrinkles. When ingested, the toxin paralyzes muscles, including those of the internal organs, causing sickness and death. The toxin is also used in medicine for conditions such as uncontrolled blinking, lazy eye, and involuntary muscle contractions.

Crystal Structure of an Anthrax Toxin -Host Cell Receptor Complex

October 28, 2004

X-ray images have revealed how anthrax hijacks important cell machinery to enter and destroy human cells. Researchers from The Burnham Institute and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases discovered the structure of an anthrax toxin bound with a cell receptor using data taken at SSRL. The clearer picture of how anthrax works brings researchers closer to the development of a therapy against anthrax infection as well as a new cancer therapeutic.

Resurrecting the Dead - Structural Analysis of Hemagglutinin from the 1918 Influenza Pandemic Strain

August 30, 2004

Researchers have literally unearthed clues as to why the 1918 influenza pandemic was so deadly. The 1918 influenza pandemic ranks as the largest and most destructive outbreak of an infectious disease, killing 20 to 40 million people worldwide. Using fragments of the flu genome from Alaskan victims preserved by permafrost and army autopsy tissues, James Stevens and Ian Wilson of the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California and their collaborators have assembled genes from the 1918 flu virus.

SSRL Data Directs Prostate Cancer Drug Design

June 21, 2012

Prostate cancer, the most common cancer in men, is often a localized, slow-growing cancer, which aids treatment and improves survival rates.  However, highly aggressive, metastatic forms of the cancer occur frequently enough to make it the No. 2 cause of death in U.S. men.  Part of the reason for this high mortality rate is the lack of effective drugs to fight these more aggressive cancers. 

The Inner Workings of RNA Polymerase: How Genetic Information is Transcribed

February 27, 2004

Professor Roger D. Kornberg and his group in the Stanford University School of Medicine have devoted more than 20 years to the study of the process by which genetic information encoded in all living things by DNA is processed into a message (a process called transcription that produces messenger RNA) that then directs the synthesis of proteins. A breakthrough paper detailing the structures of the core RNA Polymerase II protein was published in Science in April 2000 and followed by two more papers in Science a year later.

The Crystal Structure of a-Thrombin in Complex with Platelet Glycoprotein (GP) Iba

January 30, 2004

When a blood vessel is cut, the body activates a repair mechanism that eventually seals the cut and prevents further blood loss. This life saving process becomes life threatening when clots form inside a functional blood vessel. Arrest of bleeding works through platelet adhesion and thrombin-induced fibrin formation at the site of injury. In order for the platelets to stick to the injured tissues and to each other, they need to be activated. Thrombin is an essential protease (a type of enzyme) that activates platelets and forms blood clots in response to vascular injury.

Crystal Structures of Mammalian Carboxylesterases and Their Function in Drug and Xenobiotic Metabolism

August 29, 2003

SSRL has played an important role in characterizing a family of enzymes that detoxify heroin and cocaine, and have the potential to metabolically eliminate the nerve poisons sarin, soman, and tabun, which have claimed thousands of lives. Using x-ray crystallographic data, the Redinbo group at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has uncovered the specific and general ways the carboxylesterase enzymes bind to those dangerous substances. 

MitoNEET is a Uniquely Folded Outer Mitochondrial Membrane Protein Stabilized by Diabetes Drugs

October 31, 2007

The rise in obesity in the United States parallels a dramatic increase in obesity-associated diseases, most notably type-2 diabetes. This disease is predicted to reach epidemic proportions in the next several decades (Zimmet et al 2001, Urek et al 2007). Thus, understanding the biochemical processes underlying type-2 diabetes and identifying new targets for therapeutic intervention are critical for national and world health.

Structure of the Membrane Proximal Oxidoreductase Domain of Human Steap3, the Dominant Ferrireductase of the Erythroid Transferrin Cycle

September 30, 2008

Iron plays an integral role in many biochemical processes essential for life. However excess iron leads to the production of highly reactive hydroxyl radicals by Fenton chemistry (1). These free radicals are deleterious to cells as they react indiscriminately with proteins, DNA and lipids. Hence, iron homeostasis is a highly regulated process and is critical to human health (2). Disorders in iron metabolism, are however, surprisingly common.

Structure of the Ebola Virus Glycoprotein Bound to an Antibody from a Human Survivor

November 25, 2008

Using macromolecular crystallography techniques, the team solved the structure of a protein on the Ebolavirus's surface, called glycoprotein GP, in complex with a rare antibody identified in a human survivor. The glycoprotein-antibody complex proved especially challenging to crystallize and subsequently, to yield well-diffracting crystals. The team grew ~50,000 crystal samples and screened 800 of the largest, using in part the highly-automated robotics hardware and software at the SSRL beam lines, before finding a sample that would diffract to 3.4 Angstroms.

Structural and Functional Basis for Broad-spectrum Neutralization of Avian and Human Influenza Viruses

March 30, 2009

Scientists have recently identified a family of human antibodies that can take out an unprecedented number of different types of flu viruses, including H5N1 'bird flu' and the 1918 H1N1 'Spanish flu', which killed millions around the world during World War I, as well as seasonal flu. Using SSRL's Beam Line 9-2, Dr. Robert Liddington from the Burnham Institute for Medical Research led a team of scientists that determined the crystal structure of one such antibody, F10, in complex with the hemagglutinin H5 to unveil the molecular mechanism of virus neutralization. Results were published online 22 February 2009 in the journal Nature Structural and Molecular Biology.

An Unusual Mechanism for the Antimicrobial Target Flavine-dependant Thymidylate Synthase (FTDS)

April 30, 2009

Before DNA is made, the subunits composing DNA must be made. The essential process of making one of these subunits, thymidine monophosphate (TMP), was thought to be similar for most living things, but scientists recently discovered that some bacteria and viruses use a different type of enzyme to perform this reaction. The discovery might result in new antibiotics that would be effective against human pathogens, but not affect human cells.

Structure of P-Glycoprotein Reveals a Molecular Basis for Poly-specific Drug Binding

April 30, 2009

Medications can be rendered ineffective through cells developing multidrug resistance. This is the case in many forms of cancer cells that fail to respond to chemotherapy. The ability of these cells to avoid the effects of drugs can be due to the actions of P-glycoprotein (P-gp). This protein sits in the membranes of cells and acts like a pump. It ushers a wide range of potentially harmful molecules from inside the membrane to outside the cell. Unfortunately, it can also mediate the removal of life-saving medications.

Structural Studies of Nitric Oxide Synthase Inhibitor Complexes: An Anchored Plasticity Approach for Selective Enzyme Inhibition

April 30, 2009

Nitric oxide (NO) is one of very few gaseous signaling molecules in humans. NO causes smooth muscles to relax and blood vessels to open. Its deficiency leads to disorders such as hypertension and impotence, but too much NO can lead to rheumatoid arthritis, stroke, cancer, and other diseases. Three distinct but related enzymes (called nitric oxide synthases) make NO from an arginine molecule. One of the nitric oxide synthases, iNOS, creates localized, high concentrations of NO as part of the body's immune response. Because it is this elevated activity of iNOS that can cause disease, scientists would like to specifically inhibit the action of iNOS without interfering with the activity of the other two enzymes, eNOS and nNOS. Since the three enzymes have identical active sites (i.e. where NO is made), finding an inhibitor that will bind in this site for iNOS but not eNOS nor nNOS has proved challenging.

Deadly Carcinogen Unraveled: The Molecular Origami of Fungal Polyketides

March 29, 2010

UC Irvine researchers have unveiled the mystery behind one of the deadliest toxins that causes liver cancer. Aflatoxins are common contaminants of foods such as nuts and grains, which make up the staple diets of many developing countries. These toxins are produced by moldy fungi during food production, and are considered by the FDA to be an unavoidable food contaminant. Aflatoxin molecules are characterized by the presence of multiple aromatic rings. Chronic ingestion of aflatoxin B1 leads to liver tumors that are a major cause of death in Asia, Africa, and Central America. This toxin wreaks havoc of p53, an important gene in our body that prevents cancer. Without the protective effect of p53, then, aflatoxin further compromises immunity, interferes with our body metabolism, and causes severe malnutrition. It is urgently important to find inexpensive strategies that help protect the world population from aflatoxin food contamination.

Assembly and Evolution of Complex Fe-S Clusters as Revealed by X-ray Crystallography

April 26, 2010

The potential for using biological enzymes to make hydrogen to use as a renewable energy source is a hot topic, but little is known about how these complex enzymes assemble and work. The [FeFe]-hydrogenase enzyme binds iron and sulfur ions to catalyze the reversible production of hydrogen ions from protons and electrons. The enzyme's active site, termed the H-cluster, uses a complex Fe-S cluster comprised of a [4Fe-4S] subcluster and a 2Fe subcluster to catalyze the reaction.

Structural Basis of Pre-existing Immunity to the 2009 H1N1 Pandemic Influenza Virus

May 24, 2010

An unusual property of the last year's H1N1 "swine flu" virus pandemic is that it disproportionately affected the young. People over the age of around 65 showed much less vulnerability than to more typical flu strains, suggesting that they might have been exposed to a similar virus over three decades ago. Another atypical property of the 2009 H1N1 strain is that its hemagglutinin (HA) subunit is the same subtype as the regular seasonal strains, whereas most pandemics are caused by viruses with novel HA domains.

How a Single Receptor Discriminates between a Variety of Different Ligands

April 30, 2012

Cytokines are central to the innate immune system. Type I interferons (IFNs) are a kind of cytokine signaling protein that is important for cellular communication, regulating diverse cellular processes.  Showing surprising economy, just one receptor is responsible for binding a variety of IFNs, each with differing functions.

Fragment Screen against HIV Protease: Discovery of Two Allosteric Binding Sites

June 28, 2010

HIV protease is a common and critical drug target for combating HIV infection and AIDS. As HIV develops resistance to anti-viral drugs, new therapies are required. Since most of the virus's mutations that confer drug resistance cluster in the active site of the protease, scientists are interested in molecules that may bind other places on the enzyme. Computer simulations aid the design of drugs and fragments, which are smaller than typical drugs, to bind the enzyme's surface in a way that compliments the activity of traditional active-site binding drugs.

Marine Diatoms Survive Iron Droughts in the Ocean by Storing Iron in Ferritin

June 30, 2009

Diatoms, unicellular algae that exist almost anywhere there is water, have recently attracted attention as potential thwarters of climate change. Diatoms go through cycles of blooms, where they grow and multiply rapidly near the ocean's surface. Scarcity of a nutrient will trigger the end of a bloom and the algae sink, taking with them large amounts of sequestered carbon from the air to the bottom of the ocean. Because iron is a limiting nutrient in about 30-40% of the world's oceans, some researchers propose that artificially enriching iron in oceans would promote diatom growth and carbon dioxide capture similar to the hypothesized scenario that occurs during glacial periods when iron input into the ocean is higher.

Structures of Two Semaphorin-Plexin Complexes Reveal a Basis for Repulsive Guidance Cue Recognition and Viral Mimicry

September 27, 2010

Semaphorins are a group of proteins known for their critical role in nerve and vascular development and are bound by signaling receptors called Plexins. Some Semaphorins, including Sema7A, are involved in a variety of immune responses. Vaccinia virus, which is used in the smallpox vaccine, has a Sema7A homologue called A39R, which binds PlexinC1, Sema7A's receptor. 

Spotting Disease Hot Spots in Ryanodine Receptors

November 29, 2010

Our bodies heavily rely on calcium ions (Ca2+). Their concentration in the cell cytoplasm is normally low under resting conditions, and its influx through specialized ion channels drives many functions ranging from muscle contraction, regulating heart beats, secretion of hormones and neurotransmitter, transcription of specific genes, and more. Ca2+ can enter the cytoplasm either from the extracellular space, or from intracellular stores.

Metal templated protein interface design

January 31, 2011

It took nature billions of years to evolve proteins that can selectively bind to certain metals. Researchers are now seeking to create such proteins synthetically in the lab, with the end-goal of creating new metal-based functions.

Crystal structure of human symplekin-Ssu72-CTD phosphopeptide complex

February 28, 2011

Messenger RNA, responsible for relaying information from the DNA to the ribosomes, is given a 5’ cap and a 3’ tail. The 3′-end cleavage and polyadenylation are performed by a large protein complex that includes a scaffolding protein called symplekin.

Neisseria menindigitis PorB: From Structure to Function to Disease

April 25, 2011

While much is known about how the acquired immune system recognizes and responds to pathogens, the innate immune system, which also fights off infections and disease, is much less well understood. The inflammatory responses of the innate immune system can be activated by toll-like receptors (TLRs), which often bind to elements from pathogens that have a regular repeat, such as double-stranded RNA.

Structure Determination of an Oxidized Enzyme Intermediate

May 30, 2011

At times, different observational tools do not give the same answer when measuring the same thing.  Such was the case when looking at the metalloenzyme transition state species Fe(IV)-O, important as an oxidant in a number of iron-containing enzymes. While x-ray absorption spectroscopic experiments determined the Fe-O bond length to be short (less than 1.7 Å), some results from crystallographic studies indicated that the bond length was longer (1.8-1.9 Å).

Enabling New Science with Advanced Beam Line Control and the Quantum-315 CCD Detector: The Ultra-High Resolution Structure of Nitrogenase MoFe-Protein

September 30, 2002

The Research group of Douglas Rees at the California Institute of Technology collected X-ray crystallographic data to a resolution of 1.16 Å at SSRL Beam Line 9-2 using the new Quantum-315 CCD detector from crystals of Nitrogenase MoFe-Protein, an extremely efficient enzyme found in bacteria that catalyzes the production of ammonia from dinitrogen. Bacteria produce about half of the world’s bio-nitrogen available for agriculture, the rest comes from nitrogenous fertilizer produced chemically at extreme temperature and pressure, consuming about 1% of the world's total annual energy supply. 

ABC Transporter Architecture and Mechanism

August 30, 2002

Transport proteins, embedded in lipid membranes, facilitate the import of nutrients into cells or the release of toxic products into the surrounding medium. The largest and arguably the most important family of membrane transport proteins are the ABC transporters. They are ubiquitous in biology and power the translocation of substrates across the membrane, often against a concentration gradient, by hydrolyzing ATP (Higgins, 1992). 

Structure of RNA Polymerase II

April 30, 2001

RNA Polymerase transcribes genetic information into a message that can be read by the ribosome to produce protein The research group of Professor Roger Kornberg of Stanford University has studied the structure of this 12-subunit and half-megadalton size macromolecular machine using diffraction data collected at SSRL.

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