Image page: Elucidation of the High Resolution Structure of
Crotoxin Complex:
W.K. Keck Center for Computational Biology and Verna and Marrs McLean
Department for Biochemistry, Rm. 326B
Baylor College of Medicine, 1 Baylor Plaza, Houston TX 77030,
U.S.A.
For a description of my project, click here.
The source of venom:
Image
(218 Kb) of Crotalus durissus terrificus
found in the Brazilian rain forest.
Venom is collected from the snake at the Institut de Butantan in
Sao Paolo, Brazil. It is separated using a 2-step column
chromatography procedure from convulxin and crotamin and obtained
at a 60-70% yield.
Diffraction data:
A low-magnification image (79 Kb) of a crotoxin
complex crystal recorded in the JEOL4000EX at 400 kV on a
Gatan 1024 x 1024 slow-scan CCD camera (model 679).
This CCD camera was purchased with financial support from the
W.M. Keck Foundation.
This glucose-embedded crystal measures over 3 micron on edge and
is ~128 Å thick. Crystals like these are prepared on
grids (200-400 holes/inch) covered
with a perforated carbon film, and a thin continuous carbon film.
An electron diffraction pattern
(92 Kb) of a crotoxin
complex crystal like seen above showing reflections extending to
3 Å. The projected unit cell of the crystal is
38.8 x 38.8 Å with an included angle of 90o.
This diffraction pattern was recorded on our slow-scan CCD camera.
The electron dose used for this pattern was 0.02 electron/Å2.
Montage
(73 Kb) of the 1st and the 128th electron diffraction pattern
from a tilt series consisting of 128 patterns.
These patterns were acquired from a single crystal of crotoxin
complex embedded in glucose on the slow-scan CCD camera.
The tilt angle was decremented for each subsequent pattern
from +43o to finally -53.8o.
The crystal was 128 Å thick.
Click here to see a MPEG
movie (1.2 Mb) of a tilt series of 125 diffraction patterns recorded from
a single crystal 256 Å thick, that was tilted from +50o to -52o.
The individual diffraction patterns were computer processed to remove the
background due to inelastic scattering, and to include a tilt angle indicator.
The unique set of images was duplicated in the computer in reverse
order to generate a set of images from -52o to +50o.
Image
(40 Kb) of the merged intensity showing the 3D
sampling by 353 patterns.
Six tilt series were merged out of more than 15 series that were recorded.
This data set contains diffraction data from 54,868 reflections that are
present to 3.3 Å resolution isotropically;
the completeness is 88.2 %, and the Rmerg is 26.9% for the 3D merging.
Postscript file (596 Kb) and
image (11 Kb) of the merged intensity showing the intensity distribution
after merging the 353 patterns. The data was projected onto the plane
made by the z*-axis and the combined a*b*-axis. The diameter of the
dots is proportional to the reflections' intensity all scaled by the
highest intensity.
Postscript file
(421 Kb) and image (20 Kb)
of four intensity profiles of lattice rod after merging. Plotted
are the fitted intensity (continuous line), the observed intensities
(small triangles) and the error of the fit (very small dots) for the
(8,1) (top-left), the (7,6) (top-right), the (1,8) (bottom-left)
and the (2,2) (bottom-right). The rods are at 4.8 Å to 14 Å
resolution. The 3D resolution, however, for the (8,1) and (1,8) is
3.2 Å.
Image data:
Postscript file
(33 Kb) of the summed intensity at
all lattice points within shells of resolution for crotoxin complex crystals
embedded in vitreous ice as well as glucose.
Image
(265 Kb) showing two spots from a spot-scan
micrograph of crotoxin complex embedded in vitreous ice.
Owing to a difference in density between the vitreous ice
and the protein, the lattice shows up quite clearly.
The picture was recorded on film at 40,000x using 6-7
electrons/Å2.
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Last update: July 19th 1996