In
the many scientific endeavors that are driven by organic chemistry,
unambiguous identification of small molecules is of paramount importance.
Over the past 50 years, NMR and other powerful spectroscopic techniques
have been developed to address this challenge. While almost all of
these techniques rely on inference of connectivity, the unambiguous
determination of a small molecule’s structure requires X-ray
and/or neutron diffraction studies. In practice, however, X-ray crystallography
is rarely applied in routine organic chemistry due to intrinsic limitations
of both the analytes and the technique. Here we report the use of
the electron cryo-microscopy (cryoEM) method microcrystal electron
diffraction (MicroED) to provide routine and unambiguous structural
determination of small organic molecules. From simple powders, with
minimal sample preparation, we could collect high-quality MicroED
data from nanocrystals (∼100 nm, ∼10–15 g) resulting in atomic resolution (<1 Å) crystal structures
in minutes.
Micro-crystal electron diffraction (MicroED) combines the efficiency of electron scattering with diffraction to allow structure determination from nano-sized crystalline samples in cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM). It has been used to solve structures of a diverse set of biomolecules and materials, in some cases to sub-atomic resolution. However, little is known about the damaging effects of the electron beam on samples during such measurements. We assess global and site-specific damage from electron radiation on nanocrystals of proteinase K and of a prion hepta-peptide and find that the dynamics of electron-induced damage follow well-established trends observed in X-ray crystallography. Metal ions are perturbed, disulfide bonds are broken, and acidic side chains are decarboxylated while the diffracted intensities decay exponentially with increasing exposure. A better understanding of radiation damage in MicroED improves our assessment and processing of all types of cryo-EM data.
Solving the atomic structure of metallic clusters is fundamental to understanding their optical, electronic, and chemical properties. Herein we present the structure of the largest aqueous gold cluster, Au146(p-MBA)57 (p-MBA: para-mercaptobenzoic acid), solved by electron diffraction (MicroED) to subatomic resolution (0.85 Å) and by X-ray diffraction at atomic resolution (1.3 Å). The 146 gold atoms may be decomposed into two constituent sets consisting of 119 core and 27 peripheral atoms. The core atoms are organized in a twinned FCC structure whereas the surface gold atoms follow a C2 rotational symmetry about an axis bisecting the twinning plane. The protective layer of 57 p-MBAs fully encloses the cluster and comprises bridging, monomeric, and dimeric staple motifs. Au146(p-MBA)57 is the largest cluster observed exhibiting a bulk-like FCC structure as well as the smallest gold particle exhibiting a stacking fault.
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