We have used X-ray diffraction on the rhombohedral phospholipid phase to reconstruct stalk structures in different pure lipids and lipid mixtures with unprecedented resolution, enabling a quantitative analysis of geometry, as well as curvature and hydration energies. Electron density isosurfaces are used to study shape and curvature properties of the bent lipid monolayers. We observe that the stalk structure is highly universal in different lipid systems. The associated curvatures change in a subtle, but systematic fashion upon changes in lipid composition. In addition, we have studied the hydration interaction prior to the transition from the lamellar to the stalk phase. The results indicate that facilitating dehydration is the key to promote stalk formation, which becomes favorable at an approximately constant interbilayer separation of 9.0 AE 0.5 Å for the investigated lipid compositions.curvature energy | hydration force | lipid bilayer | E xocytosis, intracellular transport, neurotransmission, fertilization, or viral entry, require that two membranes merge into one. This event, membrane fusion, involves a complex interplay of different membrane lipids, proteins, and water molecules on length scales of few nm. Following the "lipidic pore hypothesis", it is now well accepted that membrane fusion involves a sequence of lipidic nonbilayer intermediates, whose formation is catalyzed and guided by a specialized protein machinery (1, 2). A stage termed "hemifusion" in which the lipids of the outer leaflets of two membrane-enclosed compartments about to fuse can mix, whereas the inner leaflets and the enclosed content remain unaltered (3), has been confirmed by a variety of methods including conical electron tomography (4) and, more indirectly; e.g., by electron spin resonance (5) and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (6). Studying the fusion of protein-free bilayers of well defined lipid composition can contribute useful insights into the physical principles governing the merger of their more complex biological counterparts and clarify the effect of individual lipid species.The first connection between two lipid bilayers is the so-called stalk sketched in Fig. 1A (7). The proximal lipid monolayers have merged into one strongly curved monolayer, whereas the distal ones are still separated and intact. A persistent problem in membrane biophysics is to determine the precise structure of stalks and the free energy barrier for stalk formation. In a long series of papers (8-16), this determination has been attempted within the framework of the continuum theory of membrane elasticity (17, 18). More recently, with the advent of sufficient computational power, simulations including molecular details have become feasible [e.g. (19, 20) and references therein]. While stalk formation between lipid bilayers in close contact is generally accepted as the initial step in possibly all membrane fusion reactions (7), the subsequent stages from stalk to complete fusion are still debated and different pathways may exist (21)....
The nano-scale structure of cytoskeletal biopolymers as well as sophisticated superstructures determine the versatile cellular shapes and specific mechanical properties. One example is keratin intermediate filaments in epithelial cells, which form thick bundles that can further organize in a crosslinked network. To study the native structure of keratin bundles in whole cells, high-resolution techniques are required, which do at the same time achieve high penetration depths. We employ scanning x-ray diffraction using a nano-focused x-ray beam to study the structure of keratin in freeze-dried eukaryotic cells. By scanning the sample through the beam we obtain x-ray dark-field images with a resolution of the order of the beam size, which clearly show the keratin network. Each individual diffraction pattern is further analyzed to yield insight into the local sample structure, which allows us to determine the local structure orientation. Due to the small beam size we access the structure in a small sample volume without performing the ensemble average over one complete cell.
The new European X-ray Free-Electron Laser is the first X-ray free-electron laser capable of delivering X-ray pulses with a megahertz inter-pulse spacing, more than four orders of magnitude higher than previously possible. However, to date, it has been unclear whether it would indeed be possible to measure high-quality diffraction data at megahertz pulse repetition rates. Here, we show that high-quality structures can indeed be obtained using currently available operating conditions at the European XFEL. We present two complete data sets, one from the well-known model system lysozyme and the other from a so far unknown complex of a β-lactamase from K. pneumoniae involved in antibiotic resistance. This result opens up megahertz serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX) as a tool for reliable structure determination, substrate screening and the efficient measurement of the evolution and dynamics of molecular structures using megahertz repetition rate pulses available at this new class of X-ray laser source.
A raster scanning serial protein crystallography approach is presented, that consumes as low ∼200–700 nl of sedimented crystals. New serial data pre-analysis software, NanoPeakCell, is introduced.
High-resolution x-ray imaging techniques offer a variety of possibilities for studying the nanoscale structure of biological cells. A challenging task remains the study of cells by x rays in their natural, aqueous environment. Here, we overcome this limitation by presenting scanning x-ray diffraction measurements with beam sizes in the range of a few hundred nm on living and fixed-hydrated eukaryotic cells in microfluidic devices which mimic a native environment. The direct comparison between fixed-hydrated and living cells shows distinct differences in the scattering signal, pointing to structural changes on the order of 30 to 50 nm.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.