Raimund Fromme
Arizona State University
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Featured researches published by Raimund Fromme.
Nature | 2011
Henry N. Chapman; Petra Fromme; Anton Barty; Thomas A. White; Richard A. Kirian; Andrew Aquila; Mark S. Hunter; Joachim Schulz; Daniel P. DePonte; Uwe Weierstall; R. Bruce Doak; Filipe R. N. C. Maia; Andrew V. Martin; Ilme Schlichting; Lukas Lomb; Nicola Coppola; Robert L. Shoeman; Sascha W. Epp; Robert Hartmann; Daniel Rolles; A. Rudenko; Lutz Foucar; Nils Kimmel; Georg Weidenspointner; Peter Holl; Mengning Liang; Miriam Barthelmess; Carl Caleman; Sébastien Boutet; Michael J. Bogan
X-ray crystallography provides the vast majority of macromolecular structures, but the success of the method relies on growing crystals of sufficient size. In conventional measurements, the necessary increase in X-ray dose to record data from crystals that are too small leads to extensive damage before a diffraction signal can be recorded. It is particularly challenging to obtain large, well-diffracting crystals of membrane proteins, for which fewer than 300 unique structures have been determined despite their importance in all living cells. Here we present a method for structure determination where single-crystal X-ray diffraction ‘snapshots’ are collected from a fully hydrated stream of nanocrystals using femtosecond pulses from a hard-X-ray free-electron laser, the Linac Coherent Light Source. We prove this concept with nanocrystals of photosystem I, one of the largest membrane protein complexes. More than 3,000,000 diffraction patterns were collected in this study, and a three-dimensional data set was assembled from individual photosystem I nanocrystals (∼200 nm to 2 μm in size). We mitigate the problem of radiation damage in crystallography by using pulses briefer than the timescale of most damage processes. This offers a new approach to structure determination of macromolecules that do not yield crystals of sufficient size for studies using conventional radiation sources or are particularly sensitive to radiation damage.
Science | 2012
Sébastien Boutet; Lukas Lomb; Garth J. Williams; Thomas R. M. Barends; Andrew Aquila; R. Bruce Doak; Uwe Weierstall; Daniel P. DePonte; Jan Steinbrener; Robert L. Shoeman; Marc Messerschmidt; Anton Barty; Thomas A. White; Stephan Kassemeyer; Richard A. Kirian; M. Marvin Seibert; Paul A. Montanez; Chris Kenney; R. Herbst; P. Hart; J. Pines; G. Haller; Sol M. Gruner; Hugh T. Philipp; Mark W. Tate; Marianne Hromalik; Lucas J. Koerner; Niels van Bakel; John Morse; Wilfred Ghonsalves
Size Matters Less X-ray crystallography is a central research tool for uncovering the structures of proteins and other macromolecules. However, its applicability typically requires growth of large crystals, in part because a sufficient number of molecules must be present in the lattice for the sample to withstand x-ray—induced damage. Boutet et al. (p. 362, published online 31 May) now demonstrate that the intense x-ray pulses emitted by a free-electron laser source can yield data in few enough exposures to uncover the high-resolution structure of microcrystals. A powerful x-ray laser source can probe proteins in detail using much smaller crystals than previously required. Structure determination of proteins and other macromolecules has historically required the growth of high-quality crystals sufficiently large to diffract x-rays efficiently while withstanding radiation damage. We applied serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX) using an x-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) to obtain high-resolution structural information from microcrystals (less than 1 micrometer by 1 micrometer by 3 micrometers) of the well-characterized model protein lysozyme. The agreement with synchrotron data demonstrates the immediate relevance of SFX for analyzing the structure of the large group of difficult-to-crystallize molecules.
Nature | 2015
Yanyong Kang; X. Edward Zhou; Xiang Gao; Yuanzheng He; Wei Liu; Andrii Ishchenko; Anton Barty; Thomas A. White; Oleksandr Yefanov; Gye Won Han; Qingping Xu; Parker W. de Waal; Jiyuan Ke; M. H.Eileen Tan; Chenghai Zhang; Arne Moeller; Graham M. West; Bruce D. Pascal; Ned Van Eps; Lydia N. Caro; Sergey A. Vishnivetskiy; Regina J. Lee; Kelly Suino-Powell; Xin Gu; Kuntal Pal; Jinming Ma; Xiaoyong Zhi; Sébastien Boutet; Garth J. Williams; Marc Messerschmidt
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) signal primarily through G proteins or arrestins. Arrestin binding to GPCRs blocks G protein interaction and redirects signalling to numerous G-protein-independent pathways. Here we report the crystal structure of a constitutively active form of human rhodopsin bound to a pre-activated form of the mouse visual arrestin, determined by serial femtosecond X-ray laser crystallography. Together with extensive biochemical and mutagenesis data, the structure reveals an overall architecture of the rhodopsin–arrestin assembly in which rhodopsin uses distinct structural elements, including transmembrane helix 7 and helix 8, to recruit arrestin. Correspondingly, arrestin adopts the pre-activated conformation, with a ∼20° rotation between the amino and carboxy domains, which opens up a cleft in arrestin to accommodate a short helix formed by the second intracellular loop of rhodopsin. This structure provides a basis for understanding GPCR-mediated arrestin-biased signalling and demonstrates the power of X-ray lasers for advancing the frontiers of structural biology.
Photochemistry and Photobiology | 1989
Gernot Renger; M. Völker; H. J. Eckert; Raimund Fromme; S. Hohm‐Veit; P. Gräber
Abstract The influence of UV‐B irradiation on photosystem II activities has been investigated using isolated photosystem II membrane fragments from spinach. It was found: (a) The average amount of DCIP reduced per flash declined drastically with increasing irradiation time in the absence of DPC but remained almost unaffected in its presence, (b) After UV‐B irradiation, the maximum amplitude of laser flash induced 830 nm absorption changes decreases only slightly; whereas the relaxation kinetics exhibit marked effects: the (JLS components dominate the decay at the expense of ns components. The γ.s kinetics already arise after illumination with a single flash of dark adapted samples, (c) The manganese content decreases only partly at irradiation times where the oxygen evolution capacity is almost completely lost, (d) The polypeptide pattern is hardly affected; the number of atrazine binding sites markedly decreases. Based on the results of this study, UV‐B irradiation is inferred to deteriorate primarily the function of water oxidation. The action spectrum of the UV‐B effect does not reveal a specific target molecule. It is assumed that structural changes of the D‐l/D‐2 polypeptide matrix are responsible for the modification by UV‐B irradiation of the capacity of water oxidation and atrazine binding.
Science | 2013
Karol Nass; Daniel P. DePonte; Thomas A. White; Dirk Rehders; Anton Barty; Francesco Stellato; Mengning Liang; Thomas R. M. Barends; Sébastien Boutet; Garth J. Williams; Marc Messerschmidt; M. Marvin Seibert; Andrew Aquila; David Arnlund; Sasa Bajt; Torsten Barth; Michael J. Bogan; Carl Caleman; Tzu Chiao Chao; R. Bruce Doak; Holger Fleckenstein; Matthias Frank; Raimund Fromme; Lorenzo Galli; Ingo Grotjohann; Mark S. Hunter; Linda C. Johansson; Stephan Kassemeyer; Gergely Katona; Richard A. Kirian
Diffraction Before Destruction A bottleneck in x-ray crystallography is the growth of well-ordered crystals large enough to obtain high-resolution diffraction data within an exposure that limits radiation damage. Serial femtosecond crystallography promises to overcome these constraints by using short intense pulses that out-run radiation damage. A stream of crystals is flowed across the free-electron beam and for each pulse, diffraction data is recorded from a single crystal before it is destroyed. Redecke et al. (p. 227, published online 29 November; see the Perspective by Helliwell) used this technique to determine the structure of an enzyme from Trypanosoma brucei, the parasite that causes sleeping sickness, from micron-sized crystals grown within insect cells. The structure shows how this enzyme, which is involved in degradation of host proteins, is natively inhibited prior to activation, which could help in the development of parasite-specific inhibitors. In vivo crystallization and serial femtosecond crystallography reveal the structure of a sleeping sickness parasite protease. [Also see Perspective by Helliwell] The Trypanosoma brucei cysteine protease cathepsin B (TbCatB), which is involved in host protein degradation, is a promising target to develop new treatments against sleeping sickness, a fatal disease caused by this protozoan parasite. The structure of the mature, active form of TbCatB has so far not provided sufficient information for the design of a safe and specific drug against T. brucei. By combining two recent innovations, in vivo crystallization and serial femtosecond crystallography, we obtained the room-temperature 2.1 angstrom resolution structure of the fully glycosylated precursor complex of TbCatB. The structure reveals the mechanism of native TbCatB inhibition and demonstrates that new biomolecular information can be obtained by the “diffraction-before-destruction” approach of x-ray free-electron lasers from hundreds of thousands of individual microcrystals.
Nature Communications | 2014
Uwe Weierstall; Daniel James; Chong Wang; Thomas A. White; Dingjie Wang; Wei Liu; John C. Spence; R. Bruce Doak; Garrett Nelson; Petra Fromme; Raimund Fromme; Ingo Grotjohann; Christopher Kupitz; Nadia A. Zatsepin; Haiguang Liu; Shibom Basu; Daniel Wacker; Gye Won Han; Vsevolod Katritch; Sébastien Boutet; Marc Messerschmidt; Garth J. Williams; Jason E. Koglin; M. Marvin Seibert; Markus Klinker; Cornelius Gati; Robert L. Shoeman; Anton Barty; Henry N. Chapman; Richard A. Kirian
Lipidic cubic phase (LCP) crystallization has proven successful for high-resolution structure determination of challenging membrane proteins. Here we present a technique for extruding gel-like LCP with embedded membrane protein microcrystals, providing a continuously renewed source of material for serial femtosecond crystallography. Data collected from sub-10-μm-sized crystals produced with less than 0.5 mg of purified protein yield structural insights regarding cyclopamine binding to the Smoothened receptor.
Science | 2013
Wei Liu; Daniel Wacker; Cornelius Gati; Gye Won Han; Daniel James; Dingjie Wang; Garrett Nelson; Uwe Weierstall; Vsevolod Katritch; Anton Barty; Nadia A. Zatsepin; Dianfan Li; Marc Messerschmidt; Sébastien Boutet; Garth J. Williams; Jason E. Koglin; M. Marvin Seibert; Chong Wang; Syed T. A. Shah; Shibom Basu; Raimund Fromme; Christopher Kupitz; Kimberley Rendek; Ingo Grotjohann; Petra Fromme; Richard A. Kirian; Kenneth R. Beyerlein; Thomas A. White; Henry N. Chapman; Martin Caffrey
G Structures G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) are eukaryotic membrane proteins that have a central role in cellular communication and have become key drug targets. To overcome the difficulties of growing GPCRs crystals, Liu et al. (p. 1521) used an x-ray free-electron laser to determine a high-resolution structure of the serotonin receptor from microcrystals. The structure of a human serotonin receptor was solved using a free-electron laser to analyze microcrystals. X-ray crystallography of G protein–coupled receptors and other membrane proteins is hampered by difficulties associated with growing sufficiently large crystals that withstand radiation damage and yield high-resolution data at synchrotron sources. We used an x-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) with individual 50-femtosecond-duration x-ray pulses to minimize radiation damage and obtained a high-resolution room-temperature structure of a human serotonin receptor using sub-10-micrometer microcrystals grown in a membrane mimetic matrix known as lipidic cubic phase. Compared with the structure solved by using traditional microcrystallography from cryo-cooled crystals of about two orders of magnitude larger volume, the room-temperature XFEL structure displays a distinct distribution of thermal motions and conformations of residues that likely more accurately represent the receptor structure and dynamics in a cellular environment.
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
Optics Express | 2012
Andrew Aquila; Mark S. Hunter; R. Bruce Doak; Richard A. Kirian; Petra Fromme; Thomas A. White; Jakob Andreasson; David Arnlund; Sasa Bajt; Thomas R. M. Barends; Miriam Barthelmess; Michael J. Bogan; Christoph Bostedt; Hervé Bottin; John D. Bozek; Carl Caleman; Nicola Coppola; Jan Davidsson; Daniel P. DePonte; Veit Elser; Sascha W. Epp; Benjamin Erk; Holger Fleckenstein; Lutz Foucar; Matthias Frank; Raimund Fromme; Heinz Graafsma; Ingo Grotjohann; Lars Gumprecht; Janos Hajdu
We demonstrate the use of an X-ray free electron laser synchronized with an optical pump laser to obtain X-ray diffraction snapshots from the photoactivated states of large membrane protein complexes in the form of nanocrystals flowing in a liquid jet. Light-induced changes of Photosystem I-Ferredoxin co-crystals were observed at time delays of 5 to 10 µs after excitation. The result correlates with the microsecond kinetics of electron transfer from Photosystem I to ferredoxin. The undocking process that follows the electron transfer leads to large rearrangements in the crystals that will terminally lead to the disintegration of the crystals. We describe the experimental setup and obtain the first time-resolved femtosecond serial X-ray crystallography results from an irreversible photo-chemical reaction at the Linac Coherent Light Source. This technique opens the door to time-resolved structural studies of reaction dynamics in biological systems.
Science | 2016
Kanupriya Pande; C. Hutchison; Gerrit Groenhof; Andy Aquila; Josef S. Robinson; Jason Tenboer; Shibom Basu; Sébastien Boutet; Daniel P. DePonte; Mengning Liang; Thomas A. White; Nadia A. Zatsepin; Oleksandr Yefanov; Dmitry Morozov; Dominik Oberthuer; Cornelius Gati; Ganesh Subramanian; Daniel James; Yun Zhao; J. D. Koralek; Jennifer Brayshaw; Christopher Kupitz; Chelsie E. Conrad; Shatabdi Roy-Chowdhury; Jesse Coe; Markus Metz; Paulraj Lourdu Xavier; Thomas D. Grant; Jason E. Koglin; Gihan Ketawala
Visualizing a response to light Many biological processes depend on detecting and responding to light. The response is often mediated by a structural change in a protein that begins when absorption of a photon causes isomerization of a chromophore bound to the protein. Pande et al. used x-ray pulses emitted by a free electron laser source to conduct time-resolved serial femtosecond crystallography in the time range of 100 fs to 3 ms. This allowed for the real-time tracking of the trans-cis isomerization of the chromophore in photoactive yellow protein and the associated structural changes in the protein. Science, this issue p. 725 The trans-to-cis isomerization of a key chromophore is characterized on ultrafast time scales. A variety of organisms have evolved mechanisms to detect and respond to light, in which the response is mediated by protein structural changes after photon absorption. The initial step is often the photoisomerization of a conjugated chromophore. Isomerization occurs on ultrafast time scales and is substantially influenced by the chromophore environment. Here we identify structural changes associated with the earliest steps in the trans-to-cis isomerization of the chromophore in photoactive yellow protein. Femtosecond hard x-ray pulses emitted by the Linac Coherent Light Source were used to conduct time-resolved serial femtosecond crystallography on photoactive yellow protein microcrystals over a time range from 100 femtoseconds to 3 picoseconds to determine the structural dynamics of the photoisomerization reaction.