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Dive into the research topics where Stefan P. Hau-Riege is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefan P. Hau-Riege.


Nature | 2011

Femtosecond x-ray protein nanocrystallography

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.


Nature Physics | 2006

Femtosecond diffractive imaging with a soft-X-ray free-electron laser

Henry N. Chapman; Anton Barty; Michael J. Bogan; Sébastien Boutet; Matthias Frank; Stefan P. Hau-Riege; Stefano Marchesini; Bruce W. Woods; Sasa Bajt; W. Henry Benner; Richard A. London; Elke Plönjes; Marion Kuhlmann; Rolf Treusch; S. Düsterer; T. Tschentscher; Jochen R. Schneider; Eberhard Spiller; T. Möller; Christoph F. O. Bostedt; M. Hoener; David A. Shapiro; Keith O. Hodgson; David van der Spoel; Florian Burmeister; Magnus Bergh; Carl Caleman; Gösta Huldt; M. Marvin Seibert; Filipe R. N. C. Maia

Theory predicts1,2,3,4 that, with an ultrashort and extremely bright coherent X-ray pulse, a single diffraction pattern may be recorded from a large macromolecule, a virus or a cell before the sample explodes and turns into a plasma. Here we report the first experimental demonstration of this principle using the FLASH soft-X-ray free-electron laser. An intense 25 fs, 4×1013 W cm−2 pulse, containing 1012 photons at 32 nm wavelength, produced a coherent diffraction pattern from a nanostructured non-periodic object, before destroying it at 60,000 K. A novel X-ray camera assured single-photon detection sensitivity by filtering out parasitic scattering and plasma radiation. The reconstructed image, obtained directly from the coherent pattern by phase retrieval through oversampling5,6,7,8,9, shows no measurable damage, and is reconstructed at the diffraction-limited resolution. A three-dimensional data set may be assembled from such images when copies of a reproducible sample are exposed to the beam one by one10.


Nature | 2011

Single mimivirus particles intercepted and imaged with an X-ray laser

M. Marvin Seibert; Tomas Ekeberg; Filipe R. N. C. Maia; Martin Svenda; Jakob Andreasson; O Jonsson; Duško Odić; Bianca Iwan; Andrea Rocker; Daniel Westphal; Max F. Hantke; Daniel P. DePonte; Anton Barty; Joachim Schulz; Lars Gumprecht; Nicola Coppola; Andrew Aquila; Mengning Liang; Thomas A. White; Andrew V. Martin; Carl Caleman; Stephan Stern; Chantal Abergel; Virginie Seltzer; Jean-Michel Claverie; Christoph Bostedt; John D. Bozek; Sébastien Boutet; A. Miahnahri; Marc Messerschmidt

X-ray lasers offer new capabilities in understanding the structure of biological systems, complex materials and matter under extreme conditions. Very short and extremely bright, coherent X-ray pulses can be used to outrun key damage processes and obtain a single diffraction pattern from a large macromolecule, a virus or a cell before the sample explodes and turns into plasma. The continuous diffraction pattern of non-crystalline objects permits oversampling and direct phase retrieval. Here we show that high-quality diffraction data can be obtained with a single X-ray pulse from a non-crystalline biological sample, a single mimivirus particle, which was injected into the pulsed beam of a hard-X-ray free-electron laser, the Linac Coherent Light Source. Calculations indicate that the energy deposited into the virus by the pulse heated the particle to over 100,000 K after the pulse had left the sample. The reconstructed exit wavefront (image) yielded 32-nm full-period resolution in a single exposure and showed no measurable damage. The reconstruction indicates inhomogeneous arrangement of dense material inside the virion. We expect that significantly higher resolutions will be achieved in such experiments with shorter and brighter photon pulses focused to a smaller area. The resolution in such experiments can be further extended for samples available in multiple identical copies.


Physical Review B | 2003

X-ray image reconstruction from a diffraction pattern alone

Stefano Marchesini; Haifeng He; Henry N. Chapman; Stefan P. Hau-Riege; Aleksandr Noy; Malcolm R. Howells; Uwe Weierstall; John C. Spence

A solution to the inversion problem of scattering would offer aberration-free diffraction-limited three-dimensional images without the resolution and depth-of-field limitations of lens-based tomographic systems. Powerful algorithms are increasingly being used to act as lenses to form such images. Current image reconstruction methods, however, require the knowledge of the shape of the object and the low spatial frequencies unavoidably lost in experiments. Diffractive imaging has thus previously been used to increase the resolution of images obtained by other means. Here we experimentally demonstrate an inversion method, which reconstructs the image of the object without the need for any such prior knowledge.


Journal of The Optical Society of America A-optics Image Science and Vision | 2006

High-resolution ab initio Three-dimensional X-ray Diffraction Microscopy

Henry N. Chapman; Anton Barty; Stefano Marchesini; Aleksandr Noy; Stefan P. Hau-Riege; Congwu Cui; Malcolm R. Howells; Rachel Rosen; Haifeng He; John C. Spence; Uwe Weierstall; Tobias Beetz; Chris Jacobsen; David Shapiro

Coherent x-ray diffraction microscopy is a method of imaging nonperiodic isolated objects at resolutions limited, in principle, by only the wavelength and largest scattering angles recorded. We demonstrate x-ray diffraction imaging with high resolution in all three dimensions, as determined by a quantitative analysis of the reconstructed volume images. These images are retrieved from the three-dimensional diffraction data using no a priori knowledge about the shape or composition of the object, which has never before been demonstrated on a nonperiodic object. We also construct two-dimensional images of thick objects with greatly increased depth of focus (without loss of transverse spatial resolution). These methods can be used to image biological and materials science samples at high resolution with x-ray undulator radiation and establishes the techniques to be used in atomic-resolution ultrafast imaging at x-ray free-electron laser sources.


Nature | 2012

Atomic inner-shell X-ray laser at 1.46 nanometres pumped by an X-ray free-electron laser

Nina Rohringer; Duncan Ryan; Richard A. London; Michael Purvis; Felicie Albert; James Dunn; John D. Bozek; Christoph Bostedt; A. Graf; Randal M. Hill; Stefan P. Hau-Riege; J. J. Rocca

Since the invention of the laser more than 50 years ago, scientists have striven to achieve amplification on atomic transitions of increasingly shorter wavelength. The introduction of X-ray free-electron lasers makes it possible to pump new atomic X-ray lasers with ultrashort pulse duration, extreme spectral brightness and full temporal coherence. Here we describe the implementation of an X-ray laser in the kiloelectronvolt energy regime, based on atomic population inversion and driven by rapid K-shell photo-ionization using pulses from an X-ray free-electron laser. We established a population inversion of the Kα transition in singly ionized neon at 1.46 nanometres (corresponding to a photon energy of 849 electronvolts) in an elongated plasma column created by irradiation of a gas medium. We observed strong amplified spontaneous emission from the end of the excited plasma. This resulted in femtosecond-duration, high-intensity X-ray pulses of much shorter wavelength and greater brilliance than achieved with previous atomic X-ray lasers. Moreover, this scheme provides greatly increased wavelength stability, monochromaticity and improved temporal coherence by comparison with present-day X-ray free-electron lasers. The atomic X-ray lasers realized here may be useful for high-resolution spectroscopy and nonlinear X-ray studies.


Optics Express | 2012

Time-resolved protein nanocrystallography using an X-ray free-electron laser

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.


Nature Photonics | 2008

Massively parallel X-ray holography

Stefano Marchesini; Sébastien Boutet; Anne Sakdinawat; Michael J. Bogan; Sasa Bajt; Anton Barty; Henry N. Chapman; Matthias Frank; Stefan P. Hau-Riege; Abraham Szöke; Congwu Cui; David A. Shapiro; Malcolm R. Howells; John C. Spence; Joshua W. Shaevitz; Joanna Y. Lee; Janos Hajdu; M. Marvin Seibert

Stefano Marchesini, 2 Sébastien Boutet, 4 Anne E. Sakdinawat, Michael J. Bogan, Sas̆a Bajt, Anton Barty, Henry N. Chapman, 6 Matthias Frank, Stefan P. Hau-Riege, Abraham Szöke, Congwu Cui, Malcolm R. Howells, David A. Shapiro, John C. H. Spence, Joshua W. Shaevitz, Johanna Y. Lee, Janos Hajdu, 4 and Marvin M. Seibert Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 7000 East Ave., Livermore, CA 94550, USA. Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 1 Cyclotron rd. Berkeley, CA 94720, USA∗ Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, 2575 Sand Hill Road, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA. Laboratory of Molecular Biophysics, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Uppsala University, Husargatan 3, Box 596, SE-75124 Uppsala, Sweden. Center for X-ray Optics, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, USA. 6 Centre for Free-Electron Laser Science U. Hamburg, DESY, Notkestraße 85, Hamburg, Germany. Department of Physics and Astronomy, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-1504, USA Department of Physics and Lewis-Sigler Institute, 150 Carl Icahn Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA. Department of Plant and Microbial Biology, University of California, Berkeley, 648 Stanley Hall 3220, Berkeley, California 94720, USA. (Dated: February 9, 2008)


Nature | 2012

Fractal morphology, imaging and mass spectrometry of single aerosol particles in flight

N. D. Loh; Christina Y. Hampton; Andrew V. Martin; Dmitri Starodub; Raymond G. Sierra; A. Barty; Andrew Aquila; Joachim Schulz; Lukas Lomb; Jan Steinbrener; Robert L. Shoeman; Stephan Kassemeyer; Christoph Bostedt; John D. Bozek; Sascha W. Epp; Benjamin Erk; Robert Hartmann; Daniel Rolles; A. Rudenko; Benedikt Rudek; Lutz Foucar; Nils Kimmel; Georg Weidenspointner; G. Hauser; Peter Holl; Emanuele Pedersoli; Mengning Liang; M. M. Hunter; Lars Gumprecht; Nicola Coppola

The morphology of micrometre-size particulate matter is of critical importance in fields ranging from toxicology to climate science, yet these properties are surprisingly difficult to measure in the particles’ native environment. Electron microscopy requires collection of particles on a substrate; visible light scattering provides insufficient resolution; and X-ray synchrotron studies have been limited to ensembles of particles. Here we demonstrate an in situ method for imaging individual sub-micrometre particles to nanometre resolution in their native environment, using intense, coherent X-ray pulses from the Linac Coherent Light Source free-electron laser. We introduced individual aerosol particles into the pulsed X-ray beam, which is sufficiently intense that diffraction from individual particles can be measured for morphological analysis. At the same time, ion fragments ejected from the beam were analysed using mass spectrometry, to determine the composition of single aerosol particles. Our results show the extent of internal dilation symmetry of individual soot particles subject to non-equilibrium aggregation, and the surprisingly large variability in their fractal dimensions. More broadly, our methods can be extended to resolve both static and dynamic morphology of general ensembles of disordered particles. Such general morphology has implications in topics such as solvent accessibilities in proteins, vibrational energy transfer by the hydrodynamic interaction of amino acids, and large-scale production of nanoscale structures by flame synthesis.


Optics Express | 2003

Coherent X-ray diffractive imaging: applications and limitations.

Stefano Marchesini; Henry N. Chapman; Stefan P. Hau-Riege; Richard A. London; Abraham Szöke; H. He; M. R. Howells; H. Padmore; R. Rosen; John C. Spence; U. Weierstall

The inversion of a diffraction pattern offers aberration-free diffraction-limited 3D images without the resolution and depth-of-field limitations of lens-based tomographic systems, the only limitation being radiation damage. We review our experimental results, discuss the fundamental limits of this technique and future plans.

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Dive into the Stefan P. Hau-Riege's collaboration.

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Richard A. London

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Sébastien Boutet

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Anton Barty

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Sasa Bajt

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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J. Krzywinski

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

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Stefano Marchesini

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Matthias Frank

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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L. Juha

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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R. Sobierajski

Polish Academy of Sciences

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