Yong Zi Tan
Columbia University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yong Zi Tan.
Nature Methods | 2017
Yong Zi Tan; Philip R Baldwin; Joseph H. Davis; James R. Williamson; Clinton S. Potter; Bridget Carragher; Dmitry Lyumkis
We present a strategy for tackling preferred specimen orientation in single-particle cryogenic electron microscopy by employing tilts during data collection. We also describe a tool to quantify the resulting directional resolution using 3D Fourier shell correlation volumes. We applied these methods to determine the structures at near-atomic resolution of the influenza hemagglutinin trimer, which adopts a highly preferred specimen orientation, and of ribosomal biogenesis intermediates, which adopt moderately preferred orientations.
Journal of Electron Microscopy | 2016
Yong Zi Tan; Anchi Cheng; Clinton S. Potter; Bridget Carragher
Automated data collection is an integral part of modern workflows in single particle electron microscopy (EM) research. This review surveys the software packages available for automated single particle EM data collection. The degree of automation at each stage of data collection is evaluated, and the capabilities of the software packages are described. Finally, future trends in automation are discussed.
Journal of Structural Biology | 2018
Venkata P. Dandey; Hui Wei; Zhening Zhang; Yong Zi Tan; Priyamvada Acharya; Edward T. Eng; William J. Rice; Peter Kahn; Clinton S. Potter; Bridget Carragher
We present an update describing new features and applications of Spotiton, a novel instrument for vitrifying samples for cryoEM. We have used Spotiton to prepare several test specimens that can be reconstructed using routine single particle analysis to ∼3 Å resolution, indicating that the process has no apparent deleterious effect on the sample integrity. The system is now in routine and continuous use in our lab and has been used to successfully vitrify a wide variety of samples.
eLife | 2018
Alex J. Noble; Venkata P. Dandey; Hui Wei; Julia Brasch; Jillian Chase; Priyamvada Acharya; Yong Zi Tan; Zhening Zhang; Laura Y. Kim; Giovanna Scapin; Micah Rapp; Edward T. Eng; William J Rice; Anchi Cheng; Carl J Negro; Lawrence Shapiro; Peter D. Kwong; David Jeruzalmi; Amedee des Georges; Clinton S. Potter; Bridget Carragher
Single particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryoEM) is often performed under the assumption that particles are not adsorbed to the air-water interfaces and in thin, vitreous ice. In this study, we performed fiducial-less tomography on over 50 different cryoEM grid/sample preparations to determine the particle distribution within the ice and the overall geometry of the ice in grid holes. Surprisingly, by studying particles in holes in 3D from over 1000 tomograms, we have determined that the vast majority of particles (approximately 90%) are adsorbed to an air-water interface. The implications of this observation are wide-ranging, with potential ramifications regarding protein denaturation, conformational change, and preferred orientation. We also show that fiducial-less cryo-electron tomography on single particle grids may be used to determine ice thickness, optimal single particle collection areas and strategies, particle heterogeneity, and de novo models for template picking and single particle alignment.
Nature Methods | 2018
Alex J. Noble; Hui Wei; Venkata P. Dandey; Zhening Zhang; Yong Zi Tan; Clinton S. Potter; Bridget Carragher
Most protein particles prepared in vitreous ice for single-particle cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) are adsorbed to air–water or substrate–water interfaces, which can cause the particles to adopt preferred orientations. By using a rapid plunge-freezing robot and nanowire grids, we were able to reduce some of the deleterious effects of the air–water interface by decreasing the dwell time of particles in thin liquid films. We demonstrated this by using single-particle cryo-EM and cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) to examine hemagglutinin, insulin receptor complex, and apoferritin.Reducing the length of time that protein particles spend on a sample grid prior to freezing mitigates deleterious effects caused by particle adsorption to the air–water interface in single-particle cryo-EM.
Current Opinion in Microbiology | 2018
Philip R Baldwin; Yong Zi Tan; Edward T. Eng; William J Rice; Alex J. Noble; Carl J Negro; Michael A. Cianfrocco; Clinton S. Potter; Bridget Carragher
The scope and complexity of cryogenic electron microscopy (cryoEM) data has greatly increased, and will continue to do so, due to recent and ongoing technical breakthroughs that have led to much improved resolutions for macromolecular structures solved using this method. This big data explosion includes single particle data as well as tomographic tilt series, both generally acquired as direct detector movies of ∼10-100 frames per image or per tilt-series. We provide a brief survey of the developments leading to the current status, and describe existing cryoEM pipelines, with an emphasis on the scope of data acquisition, methods for automation, and use of cloud storage and computing.
Methods in Enzymology | 2016
Anchi Cheng; Yong Zi Tan; Venkata P. Dandey; Clinton S. Potter; Bridget Carragher
The new generation of direct electron detectors has been a major contributor to the recent resolution revolution in cryo-electron microscopy. Optimal use of these new cameras using automated data collection software is critical for high-throughput near-atomic resolution cryo-electron microscopy research. We present an overview of the practical aspects of automated data collection in the context of this new generation of direct detectors, highlighting the differences, challenges, and opportunities the new detectors provide compared to the previous generation of data acquisition media.
bioRxiv | 2018
Yong Zi Tan; Sriram Aiyer; Mario Mietzsch; Joshua A. Hull; Robert McKenna; Joshua C. Grieger; R. Jude Samulski; Timothy S. Baker; Mavis Agbandje-McKenna; Dmitry Lyumkis
Single-particle cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) provides a powerful methodology for structural biologists, but the resolutions typically attained with experimentally determined structures have lagged behind microscope capabilities. Here, we have exploited several technical solutions to improve resolution, including sub-Angstrom pixelation, per-particle CTF refinement, and most notably a correction for Ewald sphere curvature. The application of these methods on micrographs recorded on a base model Titan Krios enabled structure determination at ∼1.86-Å resolution of an adeno-associated virus serotype 2 variant (AAV2), an important gene-delivery vehicle.
Nature Communications | 2018
Yong Zi Tan; Sriram Aiyer; Mario Mietzsch; Joshua A. Hull; Robert McKenna; Joshua C. Grieger; R. Jude Samulski; Timothy S. Baker; Mavis Agbandje-McKenna; Dmitry Lyumkis
Single-particle cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) provides a powerful methodology for structural biologists, but the resolutions typically attained with experimentally determined structures have lagged behind microscope capabilities. Here, we exploit several technical advances to improve resolution, including per-particle contrast transfer function (CTF) refinement and correction for Ewald sphere curvature. The latter is demonstrated with several experimental samples and should become more standard as resolutions increase or at lower microscope accelerating voltages. The combined application of the described methods to micrographs recorded on a Titan Krios enables structure determination at ~1.86-Å resolution of an adeno-associated virus serotype 2 variant (AAV2), an important gene-delivery vehicle. The resulting structural details provide an improved model for understanding the biology of AAV that will guide future vector development for gene therapy.Single-particle cryo-EM is a powerful method for macromolecular structure determination. Here the authors demonstrate that Ewald sphere curvature correction, sub-Angstrom pixilation and per-particle CTF refinement can improve map quality and resolution and present the 1.86 Å cryo-EM structure of an adeno-associated virus serotype 2 variant.
Cell | 2016
Joseph H. Davis; Yong Zi Tan; Bridget Carragher; Clinton S. Potter; Dmitry Lyumkis; James R. Williamson