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Perdeuteration, purification, crystallization and preliminary neutron diffraction of an ocean pout type III antifreeze protein.


ABSTRACT: The highly homologous type III antifreeze protein (AFP) subfamily share the capability to inhibit ice growth at subzero temperatures. Extensive studies by X-ray crystallography have been conducted, mostly on AFPs from polar fishes. Although interactions between a defined flat ice-binding surface and a particular lattice plane of an ice crystal have now been identified, the fine structural features underlying the antifreeze mechanism still remain unclear owing to the intrinsic difficulty in identifying H atoms using X-ray diffraction data alone. Here, successful perdeuteration (i.e. complete deuteration) for neutron crystallographic studies of the North Atlantic ocean pout (Macrozoarces americanus) AFP in Escherichia coli high-density cell cultures is reported. The perdeuterated protein (AFP D) was expressed in inclusion bodies, refolded in deuterated buffer and purified by cation-exchange chromatography. Well shaped perdeuterated AFP D crystals have been grown in D(2)O by the sitting-drop method. Preliminary neutron Laue diffraction at 293 K using LADI-III at ILL showed that with a few exposures of 24 h a very low background and clear small spots up to a resolution of 1.85 A were obtained using a ;radically small' perdeuterated AFP D crystal of dimensions 0.70 x 0.55 x 0.35 mm, corresponding to a volume of 0.13 mm(3).

SUBMITTER: Petit-Haertlein I 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2664773 | biostudies-literature | 2009 Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Perdeuteration, purification, crystallization and preliminary neutron diffraction of an ocean pout type III antifreeze protein.

Petit-Haertlein Isabelle I   Blakeley Matthew P MP   Howard Eduardo E   Hazemann Isabelle I   Mitschler Andre A   Haertlein Michael M   Podjarny Alberto A  

Acta crystallographica. Section F, Structural biology and crystallization communications 20090326 Pt 4


The highly homologous type III antifreeze protein (AFP) subfamily share the capability to inhibit ice growth at subzero temperatures. Extensive studies by X-ray crystallography have been conducted, mostly on AFPs from polar fishes. Although interactions between a defined flat ice-binding surface and a particular lattice plane of an ice crystal have now been identified, the fine structural features underlying the antifreeze mechanism still remain unclear owing to the intrinsic difficulty in ident  ...[more]

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