Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Origin and temperature dependence of radiation damage in biological samples at cryogenic temperatures

2009; National Academy of Sciences; Volume: 107; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1073/pnas.0905481107

ISSN

1091-6490

Autores

Alke Meents, Sascha Gutmann, Armin Wagner, Clemens Schulze‐Briese,

Tópico(s)

Nuclear Physics and Applications

Resumo

Radiation damage is the major impediment for obtaining structural information from biological samples by using ionizing radiation such as x-rays or electrons. The knowledge of underlying processes especially at cryogenic temperatures is still fragmentary, and a consistent mechanism has not been found yet. By using a combination of single-crystal x-ray diffraction, small-angle scattering, and qualitative and quantitative radiolysis experiments, we show that hydrogen gas, formed inside the sample during irradiation, rather than intramolecular bond cleavage between non-hydrogen atoms, is mainly responsible for the loss of high-resolution information and contrast in diffraction experiments and microscopy. The experiments that are presented in this paper cover a temperature range between 5 and 160 K and reveal that the commonly used temperature in x-ray crystallography of 100 K is not optimal in terms of minimizing radiation damage and thereby increasing the structural information obtainable in a single experiment. At 50 K, specific radiation damage to disulfide bridges is reduced by a factor of 4 compared to 100 K, and samples can tolerate a factor of 2.6 and 3.9 higher dose, as judged by the increase of R free values of elastase and cubic insulin crystals, respectively.

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