Graeme Winter
Daresbury Laboratory
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Publication
Featured researches published by Graeme Winter.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2013
Graeme Winter; Carina M. C. Lobley; Stephen M. Prince
The basis for decision making in the program xia2 is described, alongside the framework to support these protocols. Where appropriate, applications of these protocols to interactive data processing are highlighted.
Nature Chemistry | 2012
Hakan Niyazi; James P. J. Hall; Kyra O'Sullivan; Graeme Winter; Thomas Lykke-Møller Sørensen; John M. Kelly; Christine J. Cardin
The ruthenium complex [Ru(phen)2(dppz)]2+ (where phen is phenanthroline and dppz dipyridophenazine is known as a ‘light switch’ complex because its luminescence in solution is significantly enhanced in the presence of DNA. This property is poised to serve in diagnostic and therapeutic applications, but its binding mode with DNA needs to be elucidated further. Here, we describe the crystal structures of the Λ enantiomer bound to two oligonucleotide duplexes. The dppz ligand intercalates symmetrically and perpendicularly from the minor groove of the d(CCGGTACCGG)2 duplex at the central TA/TA step, but not at the central AT/AT step of d(CCGGATCCGG)2. In both structures, however, a second ruthenium complex links the duplexes through the combination of a shallower angled intercalation into the C1C2/G9G10 step at the end of the duplex, and semi-intercalation into the G3G4 step of an adjacent duplex. The TA/TA specificity of the perpendicular intercalation arises from the packing of phenanthroline ligands against the adenosine residue. Elucidating how small molecules bind to DNA is crucial to bio-sensing and therapy applications. Two crystal structures now show the binding modes of a ‘light switch’ ruthenium complex — whose luminescence in solution increases in the presence of DNA — with oligonucleotide duplexes containing either TA/TA or AT/AT central steps, revealing a specific intercalation mode with the TA/TA species.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2010
Jun Aishima; Robin L. Owen; Danny Axford; Emma Shepherd; Graeme Winter; Karl Levik; Paul Gibbons; Alun Ashton; Gwyndaf Evans
A grid-scan tool that enables rapid characterization of large sample volumes using a microfocused X-ray beam and a fast-readout detector is reported.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
James P. J. Hall; Daniel Cook; Sara Ruiz Morte; Patrick McIntyre; Katrin Buchner; Hanna Beer; David J. Cardin; John A. Brazier; Graeme Winter; John M. Kelly; Christine J. Cardin
We report an atomic resolution X-ray crystal structure containing both enantiomers of rac-[Ru(phen)2dppz](2+) with the d(ATGCAT)2 DNA duplex (phen = phenanthroline; dppz = dipyridophenazine). The first example of any enantiomeric pair crystallized with a DNA duplex shows different orientations of the Λ and Δ binding sites, separated by a clearly defined structured water monolayer. Job plots show that the same species is present in solution. Each enantiomer is bound at a TG/CA step and shows intercalation from the minor groove. One water molecule is directly located on one phenazine N atom in the Δ-enantiomer only.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2016
David G. Waterman; Graeme Winter; Richard J. Gildea; James M. Parkhurst; Aaron S. Brewster; Nicholas K. Sauter; Gwyndaf Evans
A comprehensive description of the methods used within the DIALS framework for diffraction-geometry refinement using predicted reflection centroids is given. Examples of the advanced features of the software are provided.
Nature Communications | 2015
Helen Mary Ginn; Marc Messerschmidt; Xiaoyun Ji; Hanwen Zhang; Danny Axford; Richard J. Gildea; Graeme Winter; Aaron S. Brewster; Johan Hattne; Armin Wagner; Jonathan M. Grimes; Gwyndaf Evans; Nicholas K. Sauter; Geoff Sutton; David I. Stuart
The X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) allows the analysis of small weakly diffracting protein crystals, but has required very many crystals to obtain good data. Here we use an XFEL to determine the room temperature atomic structure for the smallest cytoplasmic polyhedrosis virus polyhedra yet characterized, which we failed to solve at a synchrotron. These protein microcrystals, roughly a micron across, accrue within infected cells. We use a new physical model for XFEL diffraction, which better estimates the experimental signal, delivering a high-resolution XFEL structure (1.75 Å), using fewer crystals than previously required for this resolution. The crystal lattice and protein core are conserved compared with a polyhedrin with less than 10% sequence identity. We explain how the conserved biological phenotype, the crystal lattice, is maintained in the face of extreme environmental challenge and massive evolutionary divergence. Our improved methods should open up more challenging biological samples to XFEL analysis.
Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2014
Richard J. Gildea; David G. Waterman; James M. Parkhurst; Danny Axford; Geoff Sutton; David I. Stuart; Nicholas K. Sauter; Gwyndaf Evans; Graeme Winter
A new indexing method is presented which is capable of indexing multiple crystal lattices from narrow wedges of data. The efficacy of this method is demonstrated with both semi-synthetic multi-lattice data and real multi-lattice data recorded from microcrystals of ∼1 µm in size.
Nature Chemistry | 2015
James P. J. Hall; Fergus E. Poynton; Páraic M. Keane; Sarah P. Gurung; John A. Brazier; David J. Cardin; Graeme Winter; Thorfinnur Gunnlaugsson; Igor V. Sazanovich; Michael Towrie; Christine J. Cardin; John M. Kelly; Susan J. Quinn
To understand the molecular origins of diseases caused by ultraviolet and visible light, and also to develop photodynamic therapy, it is important to resolve the mechanism of photoinduced DNA damage. Damage to DNA bound to a photosensitizer molecule frequently proceeds by one-electron photo-oxidation of guanine, but the precise dynamics of this process are sensitive to the location and the orientation of the photosensitizer, which are very difficult to define in solution. To overcome this, ultrafast time-resolved infrared (TRIR) spectroscopy was performed on photoexcited ruthenium polypyridyl-DNA crystals, the atomic structure of which was determined by X-ray crystallography. By combining the X-ray and TRIR data we are able to define both the geometry of the reaction site and the rates of individual steps in a reversible photoinduced electron-transfer process. This allows us to propose an individual guanine as the reaction site and, intriguingly, reveals that the dynamics in the crystal state are quite similar to those observed in the solvent medium.
Acta Crystallographica Section D Structural Biology | 2018
Graeme Winter; David G. Waterman; James M. Parkhurst; Aaron S. Brewster; Richard J. Gildea; Markus Gerstel; Luis Fuentes-Montero; M. Vollmar; Tara Michels-Clark; Iris D. Young; Nicholas K. Sauter; Gwyndaf Evans
A new X-ray diffraction data-analysis package is presented with a description of the algorithms and examples of its application to biological and chemical crystallography.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2016
James P. Hall; Páraic M. Keane; Hanna Beer; Katrin Buchner; Graeme Winter; Thomas Lykke-Møller Sørensen; David J. Cardin; John A. Brazier; Christine J. Cardin
[Ru(phen)2(dppz)]2+ has been studied since the 1990s due to its ‘light-switch’ properties. It can be used as a luminescent DNA probe, with emission switched on through DNA binding. The luminescence observed is dependent on the solvent accessibility of the pyrazine nitrogen atoms, and therefore is sensitive to changes in both binding site of the cation and chromophore orientation. The compound is also chiral, and there are distinct differences between the enantiomers in terms of the emission behaviour when bound to a variety of DNA sequences. Whilst a number of binary DNA-complex X-ray crystal structures are available, most include the Λ enantiomer and there is very little structural information about binding of the Δ enantiomer. Here, we present the first X-ray crystal structure of a Δ enantiomer bound to well-matched DNA, in the absence of the other, Λ enantiomer. We show how the binding site observed here can be related to a more general pattern of motifs in the crystallographic literature and propose that the Δ enantiomer can bind with five different binding modes, offering a new hypothesis for the interpretation of solution data.