The FixL protein of Bradyrhizobium japonicum is a dimeric oxygen sensor responsible for initiating regulation of transcription of genes encoding proteins involved in nitrogen fixation and oxidative stress. It consists of an N-terminal heme-bound PAS domain, denoted bjFixLH, and a C-terminal histidine kinase domain whose enzymatic activity depends on the ligation state of the heme. To investigate the molecular basis for this dependence and the dynamics associated with conversion between ligated and unligated states, we have conducted time-resolved Laue diffraction studies of CO recombination in bjFixLH. Time-dependent difference Fourier maps from 1 micros to 10 ms after photolysis of the heme-CO bond show movement of the side chain of Leu236 and the H and I beta-strands into the ligand binding pocket formerly occupied by CO. Long-range conformational changes are evident in the protein, driven by relaxation of steric interactions between the bound ligand and amino acid side chains and/or changes in heme stereochemistry. These structural changes fully reverse as CO rebinds to the heme. Spectroscopic measurements of CO recombination kinetics in bjFixLH crystals relate the behavior of crystalline bjFixLH to solution and provide a framework for our time-resolved crystallographic experiments. Analysis of the time-dependent difference Fourier maps by singular value decomposition reveals that only one significant singular value accounts for the data. Thus only two structural states are present, the photolyzed and the CO-bound states. The first left singular vector represents the difference in density between these two states and shows features common to difference maps calculated from the static CO and deoxy states. The first right singular vector represents the time course of this difference density and agrees well with the CO recombination kinetics measured spectroscopically. We refine the structure of the photolyzed state present in the early-microsecond time range and find that it does not differ significantly in conformation from static, deoxy bjFixLH. Thus, structural relaxation from CO-bound to deoxy bjFixLH is complete in less than 1 micros.
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December 2024
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, National Taiwan University, Taipei, 106319, Taiwan.
Ferroelectric properties of HfZrO are strongly correlated with its crystallographic orientation, with the [001] direction serving as the polar axis. However, the epitaxial growth of highly polar-axis-oriented HfZrO layers with pronounced ferroelectricity is rarely reported. Here epitaxial (001)-oriented HfZrO thin films grown by atomic layer epitaxy (ALE) is demonstrated, which achieve a state-of-the-art ferroelectric polarization up to 78.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Enzymol
November 2024
School of Chemistry, University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, United Kingdom. Electronic address:
Time-resolved X-ray crystallography experiments were first performed in the 1980s, yet they remained a niche technique for decades. With the recent advent of X-ray free electron laser (XFEL) sources and serial crystallographic techniques, time-resolved crystallography has received renewed interest and has become more accessible to a wider user base. Despite this, time-resolved structures represent < 1 % of models deposited in the world-wide Protein Data Bank, indicating that the tools and techniques currently available require further development before such experiments can become truly routine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
November 2024
Division of Biology and Chemistry, Paul Scherrer Institut, Villigen, Switzerland.
Time-resolved serial crystallography at X-ray Free Electron Lasers offers the opportunity to observe ultrafast photochemical reactions at the atomic level. The technique has yielded exciting molecular insights into various biological processes including light sensing and photochemical energy conversion. However, to achieve sufficient levels of activation within an optically dense crystal, high laser power densities are often used, which has led to an ongoing debate to which extent photodamage may compromise interpretation of the results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Infect Dis
December 2024
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, United States.
Antibiotic resistance in bacteria is a major global health concern. The wide spread of carbapenemases, bacterial enzymes that degrade the last-resort carbapenem antibiotics, is responsible for multidrug resistance in bacterial pathogens and has further significantly exacerbated this problem. is one of the leading nosocomial pathogens due to the acquisition and wide dissemination of carbapenem-hydrolyzing class D β-lactamases, which have dramatically diminished available therapeutic options.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
November 2024
Division of Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering Science, Osaka University, 1-3 Machikaneyama, Toyonaka, Osaka, 560-8531, Japan.
Hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks (HOFs) composed of multicomponent molecules in a non-stoichiometric composition have drawn great interest due to their tunable properties. However, the photobehavior of the single crystals of such mixed HOFs has not been explored. Here, we report on the synthesis, characterization and photobehavior of single crystalline non-stoichiometric HOFs (NS-HOFs).
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