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Dive into the research topics where Jonas A. Sellberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonas A. Sellberg.


Science | 2013

Simultaneous femtosecond X-ray spectroscopy and diffraction of photosystem II at room temperature.

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.


Nature | 2014

Ultrafast X-ray probing of water structure below the homogeneous ice nucleation temperature

Jonas A. Sellberg; Congcong Huang; Trevor A. McQueen; N. D. Loh; Hartawan Laksmono; Daniel Schlesinger; Raymond G. Sierra; Dennis Nordlund; Christina Y. Hampton; Dmitri Starodub; Daniel P. DePonte; Martin Beye; Chen Chen; Andrew V. Martin; A. Barty; Kjartan Thor Wikfeldt; Thomas M. Weiss; Chiara Caronna; Jan M. Feldkamp; L. B. Skinner; M. Marvin Seibert; M. Messerschmidt; Garth J. Williams; Sébastien Boutet; Lars G. M. Pettersson; M. J. Bogan; Anders Nilsson

Water has a number of anomalous physical properties, and some of these become drastically enhanced on supercooling below the freezing point. Particular interest has focused on thermodynamic response functions that can be described using a normal component and an anomalous component that seems to diverge at about 228 kelvin (refs 1,2,3 ). This has prompted debate about conflicting theories that aim to explain many of the anomalous thermodynamic properties of water. One popular theory attributes the divergence to a phase transition between two forms of liquid water occurring in the ‘no man’s land’ that lies below the homogeneous ice nucleation temperature (TH) at approximately 232 kelvin and above about 160 kelvin, and where rapid ice crystallization has prevented any measurements of the bulk liquid phase. In fact, the reliable determination of the structure of liquid water typically requires temperatures above about 250 kelvin. Water crystallization has been inhibited by using nanoconfinement, nanodroplets and association with biomolecules to give liquid samples at temperatures below TH, but such measurements rely on nanoscopic volumes of water where the interaction with the confining surfaces makes the relevance to bulk water unclear. Here we demonstrate that femtosecond X-ray laser pulses can be used to probe the structure of liquid water in micrometre-sized droplets that have been evaporatively cooled below TH. We find experimental evidence for the existence of metastable bulk liquid water down to temperatures of  kelvin in the previously largely unexplored no man’s land. We observe a continuous and accelerating increase in structural ordering on supercooling to approximately 229 kelvin, where the number of droplets containing ice crystals increases rapidly. But a few droplets remain liquid for about a millisecond even at this temperature. The hope now is that these observations and our detailed structural data will help identify those theories that best describe and explain the behaviour of water.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Room temperature femtosecond X-ray diffraction of photosystem II microcrystals

Jan Kern; Roberto Alonso-Mori; Julia Hellmich; Rosalie Tran; Johan Hattne; Hartawan Laksmono; Carina Glöckner; Nathaniel Echols; Raymond G. Sierra; Jonas A. Sellberg; Benedikt Lassalle-Kaiser; Richard J. Gildea; Pieter Glatzel; Ralf W. Grosse-Kunstleve; Matthew J. Latimer; Trevor A. McQueen; Dörte DiFiore; Alan Fry; Marc Messerschmidt; A. Miahnahri; Donald W. Schafer; M. Marvin Seibert; Dimosthenis Sokaras; Tsu-Chien Weng; Petrus H. Zwart; William E. White; Paul D. Adams; Michael J. Bogan; Sébastien Boutet; Garth J. Williams

Most of the dioxygen on earth is generated by the oxidation of water by photosystem II (PS II) using light from the sun. This light-driven, four-photon reaction is catalyzed by the Mn4CaO5 cluster located at the lumenal side of PS II. Various X-ray studies have been carried out at cryogenic temperatures to understand the intermediate steps involved in the water oxidation mechanism. However, the necessity for collecting data at room temperature, especially for studying the transient steps during the O–O bond formation, requires the development of new methodologies. In this paper we report room temperature X-ray diffraction data of PS II microcrystals obtained using ultrashort (< 50 fs) 9 keV X-ray pulses from a hard X-ray free electron laser, namely the Linac Coherent Light Source. The results presented here demonstrate that the ”probe before destroy” approach using an X-ray free electron laser works even for the highly-sensitive Mn4CaO5 cluster in PS II at room temperature. We show that these data are comparable to those obtained in synchrotron radiation studies as seen by the similarities in the overall structure of the helices, the protein subunits and the location of the various cofactors. This work is, therefore, an important step toward future studies for resolving the structure of the Mn4CaO5 cluster without any damage at room temperature, and of the reaction intermediates of PS II during O–O bond formation.


Chemical Reviews | 2016

Water: A Tale of Two Liquids

Paola Gallo; Katrin Amann-Winkel; C. A. Angell; M. A. Anisimov; Frédéric Caupin; Charusita Chakravarty; Erik Lascaris; Thomas Loerting; Athanassios Z. Panagiotopoulos; John Russo; Jonas A. Sellberg; H. E. Stanley; Hajime Tanaka; Carlos Vega; Limei Xu; Lars G. M. Pettersson

Water is the most abundant liquid on earth and also the substance with the largest number of anomalies in its properties. It is a prerequisite for life and as such a most important subject of current research in chemical physics and physical chemistry. In spite of its simplicity as a liquid, it has an enormously rich phase diagram where different types of ices, amorphous phases, and anomalies disclose a path that points to unique thermodynamics of its supercooled liquid state that still hides many unraveled secrets. In this review we describe the behavior of water in the regime from ambient conditions to the deeply supercooled region. The review describes simulations and experiments on this anomalous liquid. Several scenarios have been proposed to explain the anomalous properties that become strongly enhanced in the supercooled region. Among those, the second critical-point scenario has been investigated extensively, and at present most experimental evidence point to this scenario. Starting from very low temperatures, a coexistence line between a high-density amorphous phase and a low-density amorphous phase would continue in a coexistence line between a high-density and a low-density liquid phase terminating in a liquid–liquid critical point, LLCP. On approaching this LLCP from the one-phase region, a crossover in thermodynamics and dynamics can be found. This is discussed based on a picture of a temperature-dependent balance between a high-density liquid and a low-density liquid favored by, respectively, entropy and enthalpy, leading to a consistent picture of the thermodynamics of bulk water. Ice nucleation is also discussed, since this is what severely impedes experimental investigation of the vicinity of the proposed LLCP. Experimental investigation of stretched water, i.e., water at negative pressure, gives access to a different regime of the complex water diagram. Different ways to inhibit crystallization through confinement and aqueous solutions are discussed through results from experiments and simulations using the most sophisticated and advanced techniques. These findings represent tiles of a global picture that still needs to be completed. Some of the possible experimental lines of research that are essential to complete this picture are explored.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2012

Nanoflow electrospinning serial femtosecond crystallography

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

Accurate macromolecular structures using minimal measurements from X-ray free-electron lasers

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 | 2015

Probing the transition state region in catalytic CO oxidation on Ru

Henrik Öström; Henrik Öberg; Hongliang Xin; J. LaRue; M. Beye; M. Dell’Angela; Jörgen Gladh; May Ling Ng; Jonas A. Sellberg; Sarp Kaya; Giuseppe Mercurio; Dennis Nordlund; Markus Hantschmann; F. Hieke; D. Kühn; W. F. Schlotter; Georgi L. Dakovski; J. J. Turner; Michael P. Minitti; Ankush Mitra; Stefan Moeller; A. Föhlisch; Martin Wolf; W. Wurth; Mats Persson; Jens K. Nørskov; Frank Abild-Pedersen; Hirohito Ogasawara; Lars G. M. Pettersson; Anders Nilsson

Catching CO oxidation Details of the transition state that forms as carbon monoxide (CO) adsorbed on a ruthenium surface is oxidized to CO2 have been revealed by ultrafast excitation and probe methods. Öström et al. initiated the reaction between CO and adsorbed oxygen atoms with laser pulses that rapidly heated the surface and then probed the changes in electronic structure with oxygen x-ray absorption spectroscopy. They observed transition-state configurations that are consistent with density functional theory and a quantum oscillator model. Science, this issue p. 978 Ultrafast x-ray spectroscopy reveals electronic changes that occur during the oxidation of carbon monoxide on a ruthenium surface. Femtosecond x-ray laser pulses are used to probe the carbon monoxide (CO) oxidation reaction on ruthenium (Ru) initiated by an optical laser pulse. On a time scale of a few hundred femtoseconds, the optical laser pulse excites motions of CO and oxygen (O) on the surface, allowing the reactants to collide, and, with a transient close to a picosecond (ps), new electronic states appear in the O K-edge x-ray absorption spectrum. Density functional theory calculations indicate that these result from changes in the adsorption site and bond formation between CO and O with a distribution of OC–O bond lengths close to the transition state (TS). After 1 ps, 10% of the CO populate the TS region, which is consistent with predictions based on a quantum oscillator model.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Energy-dispersive X-ray emission spectroscopy using an X-ray free-electron laser in a shot-by-shot mode

Roberto Alonso-Mori; Jan Kern; Richard J. Gildea; Dimosthenis Sokaras; Tsu Chien Weng; Benedikt Lassalle-Kaiser; Rosalie Tran; Johan Hattne; Hartawan Laksmono; Julia Hellmich; Carina Glöckner; Nathaniel Echols; Raymond G. Sierra; Donald W. Schafer; Jonas A. Sellberg; C. J. Kenney; R. Herbst; J. Pines; P. Hart; S. Herrmann; Ralf W. Grosse-Kunstleve; Matthew J. Latimer; Alan Fry; Marc Messerschmidt; A. Miahnahri; M. Marvin Seibert; Petrus H. Zwart; William E. White; Paul D. Adams; Michael J. Bogan

The ultrabright femtosecond X-ray pulses provided by X-ray free-electron lasers open capabilities for studying the structure and dynamics of a wide variety of systems beyond what is possible with synchrotron sources. Recently, this “probe-before-destroy” approach has been demonstrated for atomic structure determination by serial X-ray diffraction of microcrystals. There has been the question whether a similar approach can be extended to probe the local electronic structure by X-ray spectroscopy. To address this, we have carried out femtosecond X-ray emission spectroscopy (XES) at the Linac Coherent Light Source using redox-active Mn complexes. XES probes the charge and spin states as well as the ligand environment, critical for understanding the functional role of redox-active metal sites. Kβ1,3 XES spectra of MnII and Mn2III,IV complexes at room temperature were collected using a wavelength dispersive spectrometer and femtosecond X-ray pulses with an individual dose of up to >100 MGy. The spectra were found in agreement with undamaged spectra collected at low dose using synchrotron radiation. Our results demonstrate that the intact electronic structure of redox active transition metal compounds in different oxidation states can be characterized with this shot-by-shot method. This opens the door for studying the chemical dynamics of metal catalytic sites by following reactions under functional conditions. The technique can be combined with X-ray diffraction to simultaneously obtain the geometric structure of the overall protein and the local chemistry of active metal sites and is expected to prove valuable for understanding the mechanism of important metalloproteins, such as photosystem II.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

Anomalous Behavior of the Homogeneous Ice Nucleation Rate in “No-Man’s Land”

Hartawan Laksmono; Trevor A. McQueen; Jonas A. Sellberg; N. Duane Loh; Congcong Huang; Daniel Schlesinger; Raymond G. Sierra; Christina Y. Hampton; Dennis Nordlund; M. Beye; Andrew V. Martin; Anton Barty; M. Marvin Seibert; Marc Messerschmidt; Garth J. Williams; Sébastien Boutet; Katrin Amann-Winkel; Thomas Loerting; Lars G. M. Pettersson; Michael J. Bogan; Anders Nilsson

We present an analysis of ice nucleation kinetics from near-ambient pressure water as temperature decreases below the homogeneous limit TH by cooling micrometer-sized droplets (microdroplets) evaporatively at 103–104 K/s and probing the structure ultrafast using femtosecond pulses from the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) free-electron X-ray laser. Below 232 K, we observed a slower nucleation rate increase with decreasing temperature than anticipated from previous measurements, which we suggest is due to the rapid decrease in water’s diffusivity. This is consistent with earlier findings that microdroplets do not crystallize at <227 K, but vitrify at cooling rates of 106–107 K/s. We also hypothesize that the slower increase in the nucleation rate is connected with the proposed “fragile-to-strong” transition anomaly in water.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011

Wide-angle X-ray diffraction and molecular dynamics study of medium-range order in ambient and hot water

Congcong Huang; Kjartan Thor Wikfeldt; Dennis Nordlund; Uwe Bergmann; Trevor A. McQueen; Jonas A. Sellberg; Lars G. M. Pettersson; Anders Nilsson

We have developed wide-angle X-ray diffraction measurements with high energy-resolution and accuracy to study water structure at three different temperatures (7, 25 and 66 °C) under normal pressure. Using a spherically curved Ge crystal an energy resolution better than 15 eV has been achieved which eliminates influence from Compton scattering. The high quality of the data allows for a reliable Fourier transform of the experimental data resolving shell structure out to ~12 Å, i.e. 5 hydration shells. Large-scale molecular dynamics (MD) simulations using the TIP4P/2005 force-field reproduce excellently the experimental shell-structure in the range 4-12 Å although less agreement is seen for the first peak in the intermolecular pair-correlation function (PCF). The Shiratani-Sasai Local Structure Index [J. Chem. Phys. 104, 7671 (1996)] identifies a tetrahedral minority giving the intermediate-range oscillations in the O-O PCF and a disordered majority providing a more featureless background in this range. The current study supports the proposal that the structure of liquid water, even at high temperatures, can be described in terms of a two-state fluctuation model involving local structures related to the high-density and low-density forms of liquid water postulated in the liquid-liquid phase transition hypothesis.

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Dennis Nordlund

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Hirohito Ogasawara

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Hartawan Laksmono

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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W. F. Schlotter

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Sarp Kaya

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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