Despina Milathianaki
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Despina Milathianaki.
Science | 2013
Jan Kern; Roberto Alonso-Mori; Rosalie Tran; Johan Hattne; Richard J. Gildea; Nathaniel Echols; Carina Glöckner; Julia Hellmich; Hartawan Laksmono; Raymond G. Sierra; Benedikt Lassalle-Kaiser; Sergey Koroidov; Alyssa Lampe; Guangye Han; Sheraz Gul; Dörte DiFiore; Despina Milathianaki; Alan Fry; A. Miahnahri; Donald W. Schafer; Marc Messerschmidt; M. Marvin Seibert; Jason E. Koglin; Dimosthenis Sokaras; Tsu-Chien Weng; Jonas A. Sellberg; Matthew J. Latimer; Ralf W. Grosse-Kunstleve; Petrus H. Zwart; William E. White
One Protein, Two Probes A central challenge in the use of x-ray diffraction to characterize macromolecular structure is the propensity of the high-energy radiation to damage the sample during data collection. Recently, a powerful accelerator-based, ultrafast x-ray laser source has been used to determine the geometric structures of small protein crystals too fragile for conventional diffraction techniques. Kern et al. (p. 491, published online 14 February) now pair this method with concurrent x-ray emission spectroscopy to probe electronic structure, as well as geometry, and were able to characterize the metal oxidation states in the oxygen-evolving complex within photosystem II crystals, while simultaneously verifying the surrounding protein structure. A powerful x-ray laser source can extract the geometry and electronic structure of metalloenzymes prior to damaging them. Intense femtosecond x-ray pulses produced at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) were used for simultaneous x-ray diffraction (XRD) and x-ray emission spectroscopy (XES) of microcrystals of photosystem II (PS II) at room temperature. This method probes the overall protein structure and the electronic structure of the Mn4CaO5 cluster in the oxygen-evolving complex of PS II. XRD data are presented from both the dark state (S1) and the first illuminated state (S2) of PS II. Our simultaneous XRD-XES study shows that the PS II crystals are intact during our measurements at the LCLS, not only with respect to the structure of PS II, but also with regard to the electronic structure of the highly radiation-sensitive Mn4CaO5 cluster, opening new directions for future dynamics studies.
Science | 2014
Jason Tenboer; Shibom Basu; Nadia A. Zatsepin; Kanupriya Pande; Despina Milathianaki; Matthias Frank; Mark S. Hunter; Sébastien Boutet; Garth J. Williams; Jason E. Koglin; Dominik Oberthuer; Michael Heymann; Christopher Kupitz; Chelsie E. Conrad; Jesse Coe; Shatabdi Roy-Chowdhury; Uwe Weierstall; Daniel James; Dingjie Wang; Thomas D. Grant; Anton Barty; Oleksandr Yefanov; Jennifer Scales; Cornelius Gati; Carolin Seuring; Vukica Šrajer; Robert Henning; Peter Schwander; Raimund Fromme; A. Ourmazd
Serial femtosecond crystallography using ultrashort pulses from x-ray free electron lasers (XFELs) enables studies of the light-triggered dynamics of biomolecules. We used microcrystals of photoactive yellow protein (a bacterial blue light photoreceptor) as a model system and obtained high-resolution, time-resolved difference electron density maps of excellent quality with strong features; these allowed the determination of structures of reaction intermediates to a resolution of 1.6 angstroms. Our results open the way to the study of reversible and nonreversible biological reactions on time scales as short as femtoseconds under conditions that maximize the extent of reaction initiation throughout the crystal. Structural changes during a macromolecular reaction are captured at near-atomic resolution by an x-ray free electron laser. Watching a protein molecule in motion X-ray crystallography has yielded beautiful high-resolution images that give insight into how proteins function. However, these represent static snapshots of what are often dynamic processes. For photosensitive molecules, time-resolved crystallography at a traditional synchrotron source provides a method to follow structural changes with a time resolution of about 100 ps. X-ray free electron lasers (XFELs) open the possibility of performing time-resolved experiments on time scales as short as femtoseconds. Tenboer et al. used XFELs to study the light-triggered dynamics of photoactive yellow protein. Electron density maps of high quality were obtained 10 ns and 1 µs after initiating the reaction. At 1 µs, two intermediates revealed previously unidentified structural changes. Science, this issue p. 1242
Science | 2015
Thomas R. M. Barends; Lutz Foucar; Albert Ardevol; Karol Nass; Andrew Aquila; Sabine Botha; R. Bruce Doak; Konstantin Falahati; Elisabeth Hartmann; M. Hilpert; Marcel Heinz; Matthias C. Hoffmann; Jürgen Köfinger; Jason E. Koglin; Gabriela Kovácsová; Mengning Liang; Despina Milathianaki; Henrik T. Lemke; Jochen Reinstein; C.M. Roome; Robert L. Shoeman; Garth J. Williams; Irene Burghardt; Gerhard Hummer; Sébastien Boutet; Ilme Schlichting
Observing ultrafast myoglobin dynamics The oxygen-storage protein myoglobin was the first to have its three-dimensional structure determined and remains a workhorse for understanding how protein structure relates to function. Barends et al. used x-ray free-electron lasers with femtosecond short pulses to directly observe motions that occur within half a picosecond of CO dissociation (see the Perspective by Neutze). Combining the experiments with simulations shows that ultrafast motions of the heme couple to subpicosecond protein motions, which in turn couple to large-scale motions. Science, this issue p. 445, see also p. 381 Time-resolved crystallography at an x-ray laser reveals ultrafast structural changes in myoglobin upon ligand dissociation. [Also see Perspective by Neutze] The hemoprotein myoglobin is a model system for the study of protein dynamics. We used time-resolved serial femtosecond crystallography at an x-ray free-electron laser to resolve the ultrafast structural changes in the carbonmonoxy myoglobin complex upon photolysis of the Fe-CO bond. Structural changes appear throughout the protein within 500 femtoseconds, with the C, F, and H helices moving away from the heme cofactor and the E and A helices moving toward it. These collective movements are predicted by hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics simulations. Together with the observed oscillations of residues contacting the heme, our calculations support the prediction that an immediate collective response of the protein occurs upon ligand dissociation, as a result of heme vibrational modes coupling to global modes of the protein.
Nature Communications | 2014
Jan Kern; Rosalie Tran; Roberto Alonso-Mori; Sergey Koroidov; Nathaniel Echols; Johan Hattne; Mohamed Ibrahim; Sheraz Gul; Hartawan Laksmono; Raymond G. Sierra; Richard J. Gildea; Guangye Han; Julia Hellmich; Benedikt Lassalle-Kaiser; Ruchira Chatterjee; Aaron S. Brewster; Claudiu A. Stan; Carina Glöckner; Alyssa Lampe; Dörte DiFiore; Despina Milathianaki; Alan Fry; M. Marvin Seibert; Jason E. Koglin; Erik Gallo; Jens Uhlig; Dimosthenis Sokaras; Tsu-Chien Weng; Petrus H. Zwart; David E. Skinner
The dioxygen we breathe is formed from water by its light-induced oxidation in photosystem II. O2 formation takes place at a catalytic manganese cluster within milliseconds after the photosystem II reaction center is excited by three single-turnover flashes. Here we present combined X-ray emission spectra and diffraction data of 2 flash (2F) and 3 flash (3F) photosystem II samples, and of a transient 3F′ state (250 μs after the third flash), collected under functional conditions using an X-ray free electron laser. The spectra show that the initial O-O bond formation, coupled to Mn-reduction, does not yet occur within 250 μs after the third flash. Diffraction data of all states studied exhibit an anomalous scattering signal from Mn but show no significant structural changes at the present resolution of 4.5 Å. This study represents the initial frames in a molecular movie of the structural changes during the catalytic reaction in photosystem II.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2012
Raymond G. Sierra; Hartawan Laksmono; Jan Kern; Rosalie Tran; Johan Hattne; Roberto Alonso-Mori; Benedikt Lassalle-Kaiser; Carina Glöckner; Julia Hellmich; Donald W. Schafer; Nathaniel Echols; Richard J. Gildea; Ralf W. Grosse-Kunstleve; Jonas A. Sellberg; Trevor A. McQueen; Alan Fry; Marc Messerschmidt; A. Miahnahri; M. Marvin Seibert; Christina Y. Hampton; Dmitri Starodub; N. Duane Loh; Dimosthenis Sokaras; Tsu Chien Weng; Petrus H. Zwart; Pieter Glatzel; Despina Milathianaki; William E. White; Paul D. Adams; Garth J. Williams
An electrospun liquid microjet has been developed that delivers protein microcrystal suspensions at flow rates of 0.14-3.1 µl min(-1) to perform serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX) studies with X-ray lasers. Thermolysin microcrystals flowed at 0.17 µl min(-1) and diffracted to beyond 4 Å resolution, producing 14,000 indexable diffraction patterns, or four per second, from 140 µg of protein. Nanoflow electrospinning extends SFX to biological samples that necessitate minimal sample consumption.
Nature Methods | 2014
Johan Hattne; Nathaniel Echols; Rosalie Tran; Jan Kern; Richard J. Gildea; Aaron S. Brewster; Roberto Alonso-Mori; Carina Glöckner; Julia Hellmich; Hartawan Laksmono; Raymond G. Sierra; Benedikt Lassalle-Kaiser; Alyssa Lampe; Guangye Han; Sheraz Gul; Dörte DiFiore; Despina Milathianaki; Alan Fry; A. Miahnahri; William E. White; Donald W. Schafer; M. Marvin Seibert; Jason E. Koglin; Dimosthenis Sokaras; Tsu-Chien Weng; Jonas A. Sellberg; Matthew J. Latimer; Pieter Glatzel; Petrus H. Zwart; Ralf W. Grosse-Kunstleve
X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) sources enable the use of crystallography to solve three-dimensional macromolecular structures under native conditions and without radiation damage. Results to date, however, have been limited by the challenge of deriving accurate Bragg intensities from a heterogeneous population of microcrystals, while at the same time modeling the X-ray spectrum and detector geometry. Here we present a computational approach designed to extract meaningful high-resolution signals from fewer diffraction measurements.
Science | 2013
Despina Milathianaki; Sébastien Boutet; Garth J. Williams; Andrew Higginbotham; Daniel Ratner; Arianna Gleason; Marc Messerschmidt; M. Marvin Seibert; D. C. Swift; Ph. Hering; William E. White; J. S. Wark
Elastic to Plastic When a crystal is mechanically compressed, it first reacts elastically (reversibly), and then enters the plastic regime, in which the structure of the material is irreversibly changed. This process can be studied with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations on very fine temporal and spatial scales, but experimental analysis has lagged behind. Milathianaki et al. (p. 220) shocked polycrystalline copper with a laser beam, and then took successive snapshots of the crystal structure at 10-picosecond intervals. The results were compared directly with atomistic simulations and revealed that the yield stress—the point of transition from plastic to elastic response—agreed well with MD predictions. The response to shock in polycrystalline copper is seen to evolve from elastic to plastic using ultrafast x-ray diffraction. The ultrafast evolution of microstructure is key to understanding high-pressure and strain-rate phenomena. However, the visualization of lattice dynamics at scales commensurate with those of atomistic simulations has been challenging. Here, we report femtosecond x-ray diffraction measurements unveiling the response of copper to laser shock-compression at peak normal elastic stresses of ~73 gigapascals (GPa) and strain rates of 109 per second. We capture the evolution of the lattice from a one-dimensional (1D) elastic to a 3D plastically relaxed state within a few tens of picoseconds, after reaching shear stresses of 18 GPa. Our in situ high-precision measurement of material strength at spatial (<1 micrometer) and temporal (<50 picoseconds) scales provides a direct comparison with multimillion-atom molecular dynamics simulations.
Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015
Mengning Liang; Garth J. Williams; Marc Messerschmidt; M. Marvin Seibert; Paul A. Montanez; Matt J. Hayes; Despina Milathianaki; Andrew Aquila; Mark S. Hunter; Jason E. Koglin; Donald W. Schafer; Serge Guillet; Armin Busse; Robert Bergan; William Olson; Kay Fox; Nathaniel Stewart; Robin Curtis; Alireza Alan Miahnahri; Sébastien Boutet
Description of the Coherent X-ray Imaging (CXI) instrument at the Linac Coherent Light Source. Recent scientific highlights illustrate the femtosecond crystallography, high power density and extreme matter capabilities of the CXI instrument.
Nature Communications | 2015
Arianna Gleason; C. A. Bolme; Hae Ja Lee; B. Nagler; E. Galtier; Despina Milathianaki; J. Hawreliak; R. G. Kraus; Jon H. Eggert; D. E. Fratanduono; G. W. Collins; Richard L. Sandberg; Wenge Yang; Wendy L. Mao
Pressure- and temperature-induced phase transitions have been studied for more than a century but very little is known about the non-equilibrium processes by which the atoms rearrange. Shock compression generates a nearly instantaneous propagating high-pressure/temperature condition while in situ X-ray diffraction (XRD) probes the time-dependent atomic arrangement. Here we present in situ pump–probe XRD measurements on shock-compressed fused silica, revealing an amorphous to crystalline high-pressure stishovite phase transition. Using the size broadening of the diffraction peaks, the growth of nanocrystalline stishovite grains is resolved on the nanosecond timescale just after shock compression. At applied pressures above 18 GPa the nuclueation of stishovite appears to be kinetically limited to 1.4±0.4 ns. The functional form of this grain growth suggests homogeneous nucleation and attachment as the growth mechanism. These are the first observations of crystalline grain growth in the shock front between low- and high-pressure states via XRD.
Journal of Synchrotron Radiation | 2015
B. Nagler; Brice Arnold; Gary Bouchard; Richard F. Boyce; Richard M. Boyce; Alice Callen; Marc Campell; Ruben Curiel; E. Galtier; Justin Garofoli; Eduardo Granados; J. B. Hastings; G. Hays; Philip A. Heimann; Richard W. Lee; Despina Milathianaki; Lori Plummer; Andreas Schropp; Alex Wallace; Marc Welch; William E. White; Zhou Xing; Jing Yin; James Young; U. Zastrau; Hae Ja Lee
A description of the Matter in Extreme Conditions instrument at the Linac Coherent Light Source is given. Recent scientific highlights illustrate phase-contrast imaging of shock waves, X-ray Thomson scattering and X-ray diffraction of shocked materials.