Showing posts with label crystallography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crystallography. Show all posts

Thursday, 4 October 2018

Welcome to new PPS students - and a few more links...

This post is very like those I have written at the beginning of the academic year for the past few years; this is because what I have to say now is also very similar...

I would like to offer a warm welcome to the Principles of Protein Structure blog to all students who have recently started studying Birkbeck's Principles of Protein Structure (PPS) course, and a welcome back to any who have taken a break in studies and intend to complete the course this year. Welcome too if you are thinking that you might want to study with us in the future, or if you are just interested in learning more about a fascinating and fast-moving area of research in molecular biology.

I run this occasional blog to link the material that you will be studying in the course to new research developments in the areas of protein structure and function and related aspects of biotechnology and medicine. I might, example, report on talks given in the ISMB seminar series run jointly by the Department of Biological Sciences at Birkbeck and research departments in neighbouring University College London. The programme for Autumn 2018 has the intriguing title of 'Mischievous Microbes'; its themes of microbiology and infectious disease biology have links to some of the later sections of the course. Other posts may be reports from conferences (such as this one at Imperial College, London in December) or summaries of recently published papers in protein structure and allied areas/

Some earlier posts were written by "guest blogger" Jill Faircloth, who took the MSc in Structural Molecular Biology a few years ago and is now working as a freelance science communicator. She introduces herself in this post written in March 2012, in which she also describes how she found the later part of the PPS course and her thoughts on the two choices available for the second year of the MSc.

Do, if you get a chance, look through some blog posts from earlier years to see the kind of topics that we will be discussing. However, don't be discouraged if at this stage of the course you find the science presented there difficult to understand. I can assure you that it will get easier!

I also work part-time as a freelance science writer, and sometimes I even have a chance to write about structural biology. You might like to follow a set of blog posts I wrote from the International Union of Crystallography's triennial meeting in Hyderabad, India last summer (posts from 22 August - 6 September). The first entry, featuring a talk by Sir Tom Blundell, a former head of the Department of Crystallography at Birkbeck (now part of the Department of Biological Sciences) is perhaps most relevant to PPS. Sir Tom was involved in solving the structure of HIV protease, target of some of the most successful drugs for AIDS, and he went on to found a drug discovery company, Astex. This year I reported on a meeting much nearer at hand (in Liverpool) and, specifically, on one of the most exciting advances in structural biology by X-ray crystallography for some years: X-ray free electron lasers.

Finally, the best of luck to new students for the 2017-18 PPS course and for your studies at Birkbeck! We hope that many of you will go on to complete our MSc in Structural Molecular Biology.

Best wishes,

Dr Clare Sansom
Senior Associate Lecturer, Biological Sciences, Birkbeck
Tutor, Principles of Protein Structure

Friday, 27 October 2017

Welcome to new PPS students - and blogging crystallography

This post is very like those I have written at the beginning of the academic year for the past few years, if posted rather later than usual. This is because what I have to say now is also very similar...

I would like to offer a warm welcome to the Principles of Protein Structure blog to all students who have recently started studying Birkbeck's Principles of Protein Structure (PPS) course, and a welcome back to any who have taken a break in studies and intend to complete the course this year.

I run this blog to link the material that you will be studying in the course to new research developments in the areas of protein structure and function and related aspects of biotechnology and medicine. I might, example, report on talks given in the ISMB seminar series run jointly by the Department of Biological Sciences at Birkbeck and research departments in neighbouring University College London. The programme for Autumn 2017 focuses on the molecular biology of cancer; there is some material on this topic in section 5 of this course, 'Towards Tertiary Structure', where we look briefly at the structure and function of kinases. Many of the newer anti-cancer drugs, including Glivec, which has transformed the prospects for patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia, target this class of protein. Other posts may be reports from conferences or summaries of recently published papers in protein structure and allied areas; watch out for one at the end of this year featuring a lecture by the UK's newest Nobel laureate, Richard Henderson.

Some earlier posts were written by "guest blogger" Jill Faircloth, who took the MSc in Structural Molecular Biology a few years ago and is now working as a freelance science communicator. She introduces herself in this post written in March 2012, in which she also describes how she found the later part of the PPS course and her thoughts on the two choices available for the second year of the MSc.

Do, if you get a chance, look through some blog posts from earlier years to see the kind of topics that we will be discussing. However, don't be discouraged if at this stage of the course you find the science presented there difficult to understand. I can assure you that it will get easier!

And I hope that you will also be interested in some more blogging of mine, in which I explore crystallography - the most popular experimental technique for determining protein structures - more widely. In August I was lucky enough to attend the congress of the International Union of Crystallography in Hyderabad, India, and to write the conference blog. The topics I covered over the 8 days of the meeting ranged from crystallography in history to crystallography in space, but did also include some structural biology. The first post in this series covers the opening ceremony, including the award of one of crystallography's highest honours, the Ewald Prize, to Sir Tom Blundell, a former head of the Department of Crystallography at Birkbeck (now part of the Department of Biological Sciences). Sir Tom is perhaps best known for his part in solving the structure of HIV protease, target of some of the most successful drugs for AIDS, and he went on to found a drug discovery company, Astex. A later post describes a plenary lecture by John Spence of Arizona State University on imaging proteins in motion.

Finally, the best of luck for the 2017-18 PPS course and for your studies at Birkbeck! We hope that many of you will go on to complete our MSc in Structural Molecular Biology.

Best wishes,

Dr Clare Sansom
Senior Associate Lecturer, Biological Sciences, Birkbeck and Tutor, Principles of Protein Structure

Monday, 10 October 2016

Welcome to PPS students 2016-17!

This post is extremely like those I have written at this time of year for the past few years. This is because what I have to say now is very, very similar...

I would like to offer a warm welcome to the Principles of Protein Structure blog to all students who have just started studying Birkbeck's Principles of Protein Structure (PPS) course, and a welcome back to any who have taken a break in studies and intend to complete the course this year.

I run this blog to link the material that you will be studying in the course to new research developments in the areas of protein structure and function and related aspects of biotechnology and medicine. I might, example, report on talks given in the ISMB seminar series run jointly by the Department of Biological Sciences at Birkbeck and research departments in neighbouring University College London. The programme for Autumn 2016 focuses on the molecular and structural biology of infectious disease; there is material on similar topics in section 10 of the PPS course, 'Protein Interactions and Function'. Other posts may be reports from conferences or summaries of recently published papers in protein structure, protein bioinformatics and allied areas. Look out for an account of a conference on structural assemblies at Birkbeck in December that will honour the 50-year career of one of our emeritus professors, Steve Wood.

Some earlier posts on this blog were written by "guest blogger" Jill Faircloth, who took the MSc in Structural Molecular Biology a few years ago and is now working as a freelance science communicator. She introduces herself in this post written in March 2012, in which she also describes how she found the later part of the PPS course and her thoughts on the two choices available for the second year of the MSc.

Do, if you get a chance, look through some blog posts from earlier years to see the kind of topics that we will be discussing. However, don't be discouraged if at this stage of the course you find the science presented there difficult to understand. I can assure you that it will get easier!

I particularly recommend that you look at a couple of posts from December 2013 and July 2014 about the history of structural science, particularly X-ray crystallography. Crystallography was the first method to be developed for solving the structure of biological macromolecules, and it is still the most important. The year 2014 was designated by the United Nations as the International Year of Crystallography, marking the year between the centenaries of the publication of the first papers on X-ray diffraction and the award of the 1915 Nobel Prize for Physics to the father-and-son team of William and Lawrence Bragg who made the principal discoveries.

So - the best of luck for the 2016-17 PPS course and for your studies at Birkbeck! We hope that many of you will go on to complete our MSc in Structural Molecular Biology.

Best wishes,

Dr Clare Sansom
Senior Associate Lecturer, Biological Sciences, Birkbeck and Tutor, Principles of Protein Structure

Tuesday, 29 September 2015

Welcome to PPS students 2015-16!

This post is extremely like those I have written at this time of year for the past few years. This is because what I have to say now is very, very similar...

I would like to offer a warm welcome to the Principles of Protein Structure blog to all students who have just started studying Birkbeck's Principles of Protein Structure (PPS) course, and a welcome back to any who have taken a break in studies and intend to complete the course this year.

I run this blog to link the material that you will be studying in the course to new research developments in the areas of protein structure and function and related aspects of biotechnology and medicine. I might, example, report on talks given in the ISMB seminar series run jointly by the Department of Biological Sciences at Birkbeck and research departments in neighbouring University College London. The programme for Autumn 2015 focuses on transcription, which is the process through which DNA is copied into RNA; this will be covered in some detail in one of the later sections of the course, the Protein Lifecycle. Other posts may be reports from conferences or summaries of recently published papers in protein structure, protein bioinformatics and allied areas. Look out for an account of a lecture to be given at Birkbeck in October by Venki Ramakrishnan, who was awarded a share of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2009 for structural studies of ribosomes and will shortly take over as President of the Royal Society.

Some posts on this blog are written by "guest blogger" Jill Faircloth, who took the MSc in Structural Molecular Biology a few years ago and is now working as a freelance science communicator. She introduces herself in this post written in March 2012, in which she also describes how she found the later part of the PPS course and her thoughts on the two choices available for the second year of the MSc.

Do, if you get a chance, look through some blog posts from earlier years to see the kind of topics that we will be discussing. However, don't be discouraged if at this stage of the course you find the science presented there difficult to understand. I can assure you that it will get easier!

I particularly recommend that you look at a couple of posts from December 2013 and July 2014 about the history of structural science, particularly X-ray crystallography. Crystallography was the first method to be developed for solving the structure of biological macromolecules, and it is still the most important. The year 2014 was designated by the United Nations as the International Year of Crystallography, marking the year between the centenaries of the publication of the first papers on X-ray diffraction and the award of the 1915 Nobel Prize for Physics to the father-and-son team of William and Lawrence Bragg who made the principal discoveries.

So - the best of luck for the 2015-16 PPS course and for your studies at Birkbeck! We hope that many of you will go on to complete our MSc in Structural Molecular Biology.

Best wishes,

Dr Clare Sansom Senior Associate Lecturer, Biological Sciences, Birkbeck and Tutor, Principles of Protein Structure

Tuesday, 28 April 2015

Protein Machines in the Molecular Arms Race

Birkbeck’s Science Week 2015 was held from Monday 23 to Thursday 26 March and included three evenings of public talks by senior researchers. The first two lectures, on the Tuesday, were given by two of the college’s most distinguished women scientists: Helen Saibil from the Department of Biological Sciences and Karen Hudson-Edwards from Earth and Planetary Sciences; they were billed together as a ‘Women in Science Evening’.

The lectures were all introduced by the Dean of the Faculty of Science, Nicholas Keep who described Saibil, a close colleague, as “our most eminent female scientist”. She came to Birkbeck from Canada via a PhD at King’s College London under the supervision of Nobel laureate Maurice Wilkins and post-doctoral work at Oxford.

Since arriving here in the 1980s she has built up an internationally renowned structural biology lab, focusing in particular on the technique of electron microscopy. She has been a Fellow of the Royal Society since 2006 and of the Academy of Medical Sciences since 2009.

Saibil began her lecture by explaining that proteins can act as little machines, performing mechanical tasks that are essential for the maintenance of life. Her group has been interested for some time in proteins that can punch holes in the walls of cells. This allows the cell contents to leak out in a damaging process known as lysis, and it also allows toxins to enter the cells. These proteins can therefore be thought of as powerful weapons, and they are deployed on both sides of a ‘molecular arms race’: by pathogens and by the immune systems of humans and other animals.

Most soluble proteins fold into a single stable structure that tries, as far as possible, to keep their hydrophobic (“water-hating”) parts – the side chains of certain amino acids – in the interior of the protein, with the hydrophilic (“water-loving”) side chains on the outside, in contact with the watery environment inside or outside cells.

Pore-forming proteins, however, have a ‘Jekyll and Hyde’ like identity: they can form two distinctly different shapes, one as individual, soluble molecules and the other when they associate with each other into membrane-bound rings to form cylindrical pores. These structures, and the conformational change between them, are remarkably similar in proteins from bacteria and from the immune system.

Pore-forming toxins have been found in types of bacteria that are responsible for some deadly human diseases, including meningitis and pneumonia. The structure of a monomeric form of one of these proteins in solution was first solved in 1998, using X-ray crystallography. However, large complexes of many protein molecules are more readily solved by electron microscopy, particularly when those complexes are embedded in membranes.

In 2005 Saibil and her group described structures of the pore-forming toxin pneumolysin from Streptococcus pneumoniae, in complex with a model cell membrane. They found that the proteins formed two distinctly different ring-shaped structures. Initially, they formed into a ring sitting on top of the membrane, which was termed the pre-pore; then they changed shape to burrow part of each protein deep into the membrane and form the pore itself. Each monomer in the pre-pore had a structure that was similar to that of the molecule in solution, but they underwent large structural changes to form the pore.


Schematic illustration of how suilysin, a bacterial cholesterol-dependent cytolysin, drills holes in cell membranes. Image © Adrian Hodel, London Centre for Nanotechnology

Most structures solved by electron microscopy are at lower resolution than those solved by X-ray crystallography, and it is not possible to trace the positions of individual atoms at lower resolutions (e.g. worse than 3 A). Saibil and her colleagues were able to interpret the structure of the proteins making up the pore by fitting pieces of the X-ray structure of the isolated molecule into their electron density.

They found a dramatic change in structure, with the tall, thin protein structure collapsing into an arch and a helical region stretching out to form a long, extended beta hairpin. It is these hairpins that join together to form the walls of the pore. The process of pore forming therefore has three stages: firstly the toxin molecules bind to the surface of their target cells, then they associate into the circular pre-pores and finally they change shape in a concerted manner, punching holes in the cell membranes by ejecting a disc of membrane, letting other toxins in and cell contents out.

Saibil then turned the focus of her talk from attack by bacteria to the human immune system’s defence. Natural killer (NK) cells are specialised lymphocytes (white blood cells) that kill virally-infected and cancerous cells in the bloodstream. They kill on contact with their target cells by releasing a toxic protein into those cells that stimulates those target cells to commit suicide in a process known as programmed cell death or apoptosis. We have only recently learned that the mechanism through which the NK cells work is very similar to the mechanism of the bacterial pore-forming toxins.

Natural killer cells express a protein called perforin that has a similar structure in solution to the bacterial pneumolysin. Although there is very little sequence similarity between these proteins – there is only one amino acid conserved throughout all the known bacterial and vertebrate proteins of this family, a glycine at a critical position for the conformational change – the structures are similar enough to suggest that the proteins all once had a common ancestor.

Saibil and her colleagues used electron microscopy to discover that this protein forms a pore through a similar mechanism to pneumolysin: the helical region that unfolds into the beta hairpin to form the pore forms the core of the molecular machine and is largely unchanged between the structures. There are some differences between the structures, however; in particular, there is no need for the perforin structure to ‘collapse’ as the molecule has ‘arms’ that are long enough to form the hairpin and punch the hole without bending into an arch.

The mechanism through which the NK cells kill their target cells is now quite well understood. When the two cells come into contact they form a temporary structure called an immune synapse that allows the pore to form and proteases called granzymes, which induce apoptosis, to enter the target cells. This YouTube video illustrates the natural killer cells’ mechanism of action, and this one shows a detailed view of the immune synapse. Other, similar proteins have been identified in oyster mushrooms; these form more rigid structures that are easier to work with. Saibil’s group and their collaborators have been able to solve the structure of this protein in intermediate stages of pore formation and are beginning to gain an understanding of exactly how it unfolds.


The pore of the oyster mushroom protein pleurotolysin, a member of the pneumolysin family. Image © Natalya Lukoyanova and Helen Saibil, from Lukoyanova et al., PLoS Biology 13:e1002049

Mutations in perforin that prevent it from functioning cause a rare disease called haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, which is almost invariably fatal in childhood. Understanding the mechanism of action of this important family of protein ‘weapons’ in both attack and defence may help find a cure for this devastating condition, as well as for some commoner disorders of the immune system and important infectious diseases.

This post is cross-posted from the Birkbeck Events blog.

PPS students can learn much more about electron microscopy by taking the second-year module Techniques in Structural Molecular Biology to complete the MSc.

Wednesday, 7 January 2015

From Crystallography to Light (according to the United Nations)

Those of you who started the PPS course in 2014 may not have realised that they began their studies of structural biology at an auspicious time for this subject. Last year was designated the International Year of Crystallography to mark the centenaries of both the discovery of X-ray diffraction by crystals (first published in 2013) and the award, in 2015, of the Nobel Prize to the father-and-son team of William and Lawrence Bragg who made the discovery. I have blogged about this in much more detail over the previous year, with a post in December 2013 on "a very short history of crystallography" and one in July reporting on lectures by two of our distinguished emeritus professors, Paul Barnes and David Moss. Professor Moss took the subject up to date with a race through the history of structural biology, from the publication of the first protein structures - myoglobin and haemoglobin - in 1958 to the 100,000th structure that entered the Protein Data Bank in 2014. If you want to read more about the numerous events and publications around the world that honoured and publicised crystallographers during 2014, the best place to start is probably the official website of IYCr2014. And if you have access to Chemistry World, the membership magazine of the Royal Society of Chemistry, you can read two more pieces by me: "Crystal Clear" in the January 2014 issue and "Life in the Freeze Frame", featuring structural biology, in September. (Unfortunately, it is not available in the Birkbeck e-library.)

2014 was designated as the International Year of Crystallography by the United Nations, as part of its programme of using anniversaries to highlight topics and issues that it sees as important. There have been many international years on science-based topics, some broader than others: 2005, for example, was the International Year of Physics. And in this new year the focus moves on to another physical science topic. 2015 is the International Year of Light: or more precisely that "... of Light and Light-based Technologies".

And optics, the science of light, is very closely related to crystallography. Both light and X-rays are parts of the electro-magnetic spectrum and as such are both particles and waves; the differences in their frequencies and wavelengths lead to their very different properties. The first X-ray diffraction experiments were conducted mainly to find out whether the hypothesis that X-rays were electromagnetic waves with a wavelength of about 1 Angstrom was correct. The utility of this technique as a probe for molecular structure was initially a side effect of the similarity between this wavelength and the length of a covalent bond. (So-called "copper K-alpha" radiation, which is often used in crystallography, has a wavelength of 1.54Å, which is exactly equivalent to the length of a single C-C bond.) And the basic equation that defines X-ray diffraction - Bragg's Law, or nλ = 2d sin θ - applies to all electromagnetic radiation, not just to X-rays.

Advances in optical technology have been responsible for some important advances in crystallography. The discovery, in the mid- twentieth century, that charged particles emit electromagnetic radiation in the form of X-rays when accelerated radially was initially viewed as a problem of energy loss. This "lost" radiation, which is orders of magnitude more intense than the X-rays used in the first diffractometers, was soon exploited in synchrotron radiation sources and most non-routine protein structures are now solved using synchrotron radiation. The UK's synchrotron source, a doughnut-shaped structure half a kilometre across located at Harwell in Oxfordshire, is even known officially as "Diamond Light Source". And recent advances in optics are gradually reducing the size of intense X-ray sources so that it will become possible to do complex structural biology that now needs a synchrotron using a lab-based machine.

The next big technical advance to influence X-ray crystallography is the free electron laser, which can generate pulses of X-rays that are much more intense than those produced by even the largest synchrotrons. This is a beam of electrons that is accelerated to almost the speed of light through a side-to-side magnetic field to produce pulses of extremely intense electromagnetic radiation. These pulses are exceptionally short, each lasting only a few femtoseconds (1 fs = 10-15s). This is a feature of the technology that leads to two advantages: the crystals remain intact, even though they are exposed to extremely intense radiation, and it becomes possible to take "snapshot" structures very close together in time study the dynamic behaviour of molecules. Free electron laser radiation also enables precise structures to be obtained from much smaller crystals, which makes large complexes and membrane-bound proteins more tractable to crystallography. And it may one day be possible, using this technique, to determine a structure from the smallest "crystal" of all - a single molecule - and thus liberate protein crystallography from one of its most important bottlenecks: the need to grow protein crystals.

Acknowledgement:This post owes much to this one on the "Crystallography 365" blog (author unknown)

Monday, 13 October 2014

Welcome to PPS students 2014-15!

This post is extremely like those I have written at this time of year for the past few years. This is because what I have to say now is very, very similar...

I would like to offer a warm welcome to the Principles of Protein Structure blog to all students who have just started studying Birkbeck's Principles of Protein Structure course, and a welcome back to any who have taken a break in studies and intend to complete the course this year.

I run this blog to link the material that you will be studying in the course to new research developments in the areas of protein structure and function and related aspects of biotechnology and medicine. Throughout the taught course (but more often in the later part of the course) I will post reports of recent developments. I might, example, report on talks given in the ISMB seminar series run jointly by the Department of Biological Sciences at Birkbeck and research departments in neighbouring University College London. The overall title of the programme for Autumn 2014 is Synthetic Biology: an innovative and important topic that relates quite closely to some of the material we cover in the later sections of the course, particularly the sections on Bioinformatics and the Protein Lifecycle. Other posts may be reports from conferences or summaries of recently published papers in protein structure, protein bioinformatics and allied areas.

Some of the posts on this blog are written by "guest blogger" Jill Faircloth, who took the MSc in Structural Molecular Biology a few years ago and is now working as a freelance science communicator. She introduces herself in this post written in March 2012, in which she also describes how she found the later part of the PPS course and her thoughts on the two choices available for the second year of the MSc.

Do, if you get a chance, look through some of the earlier blog posts to see the kind of topics that we will be discussing. However, don't be discouraged if at this stage of the course you find the science presented there difficult to understand. I can assure you that it will get easier!

I particularly recommend that you look at a couple of posts from last academic year - December 2013 and July 2014 - about the history of structural science, particularly X-ray crystallography. Crystallography was the first method to be developed for solving the structure of biological macromolecules, and it is still the most important. The year 2014 was designated by the United Nations as the International Year of Crystallography, marking the year between the centenaries of the publication of the first papers on X-ray diffraction and the award of the 1915 Nobel Prize for Physics to the father-and-son team of William and Lawrence Bragg who made the principal discoveries. The International Year has been marked by a wide range of activities, special symposia, publications, "open labs" and even postage stamps, and there are still a few events planned.

So - the best of luck for the 2014-15 PPS course and for your studies at Birkbeck! We hope that many of you will go on to complete our MSc in Structural Molecular Biology.

Best wishes,

Dr Clare Sansom Senior Associate Lecturer, Biological Sciences, Birkbeck and Tutor, Principles of Protein Structure

Thursday, 24 July 2014

Science Week 2014: Birkbeck and the History of Crystallography

Science Week at Birkbeck in 2014 featured two lectures on Department of Biological Sciences, both presented on 2 July. One of these was a double act from two distinguished emeritus professors and Fellows of the College, Paul Barnes and David Moss. Remarkably, they both started their working lives at Birkbeck on the same day – 1 October 1968 – and so had clocked up over 90 years of service to the college between them by Science Week 2014.

The topic they took was a timely one: the history of the science of crystallography over the past 100 years. UNESCO has declared 2014 to be the International Year of Crystallography in recognition of the seminal discoveries that started the discipline, which were made almost exactly 100 years ago; a number of the most important discoveries of that century were made by scientists with links to Birkbeck.

The presenters divided the “century of crystallography” into two, with Barnes speaking first and covering the first 50 years. In giving his talk the title “A History of Modern Crystallography”, however, he recognised that crystals have been observed, admired and studied for many centuries. What changed at the beginning of the last century was the discovery of X-ray diffraction. Wilhelm Röntgen was awarded the first-ever Nobel Prize for Physics for his discovery of X-rays in 1896, but it was almost two decades before anyone thought of directing them at crystals. The breakthroughs came when Max von Laue showed that a beam of X-rays can be diffracted by a crystal to yield a pattern of spots, and the father-and-son team of William Henry and William Lawrence Bragg showed that it was possible to derive information about the atomic structure of crystals from their diffraction patterns. These discoveries also solved – to some extent – the debate about whether X-rays were particles or waves, as only waves diffract; we now know that all electromagnetic radiation, including X-rays, can be thought of as both particles and waves

Von Laue and the Braggs were awarded Nobel Prizes for Physics in 1914 and 1915 respectively, and between 1916 and 1964 no fewer than 13 more Nobel Prizes were awarded to 18 more scientists for discoveries related to crystallography. Petrus Debye, who won the Chemistry prize in 1936, showed how to quantify the thermal motion of atoms as vibrations within a crystal. He also invented one of the first powder diffraction cameras, used to obtain diffraction patterns from powders of tiny crystallites. Another Nobel Laureate, Percy Bridgman, studied the structures of materials under pressure: it has been said that he would “squeeze anything he could lay his hands on”, often up to intense pressures.

Scientists and scientific commentators often argue about which of their colleagues would have most deserved to win the ultimate accolade. Barnes named three who, he said, could easily have been Nobel Laureates in the field of crystallography. One, Paul Ewald, was a theoretical physicist who had studied for his PhD under von Laue in Munich, and the other two had strong links with Birkbeck. JD “Sage” Bernal was Professor of Physics and then of Crystallography here; he was famous for obtaining, with Dorothy Crowfoot (later Hodgkin) the first diffraction pattern from a protein crystal, but his insights into the atomic basis of the very different properties of carbon as diamond and as graphite were perhaps even more remarkable. He took on Rosalind Franklin, whose diffraction patterns of DNA had led Watson and Crick to deduce its double helical structure, after she left King’s College, and she did pioneering work on virus structure here until her premature death in 1958.

Barnes ended his talk and led into Moss’s second half-century with a discussion of similarities between the earliest crystallography and today, as now, you only need three things to obtain a diffraction pattern: a source of X-rays, a crystalline sample, and a recording device; the differences all lie in the power and precision of the equipment used. He demonstrated this with a “symbolic demo” that ended when he pulled a model structure of a zeolite out of a large cardboard box.


Paul Barnes demonstrates the basic principles of X-ray crystallography using a large cardboard box. Photo © Harish Patel and Ruben Zamora, Department of Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck

David Moss then took over to describe some of the most important crystallographic discoveries from the last half-century. His talk concentrated on the structures of large biological molecules, particularly proteins, and he began by explaining the importance of protein structure. All the chemistry that is necessary for life is controlled by proteins, and knowing the structure of proteins enables us to understand, and potentially also to modify, how they work.

Even the smallest proteins contain thousands of atoms; in order to determine the position of all the atoms in a protein using crystallography you need to make an enormous number of measurements of the positions and intensities of X-ray spots. The process of solving the structure of a protein is no different from that of solving a small molecule crystal structure, but it is more complex and takes much more time. Very briefly, it involves crystallising the protein; shining an intense beam of X-rays on the resulting crystals to produce diffraction patterns, and then doing some extremely complex calculations. The first protein structures, obtained without the benefit of automation and modern computers, took many years and sometimes even decades.

Thanks to Bernal’s genius, energy and pioneering spirit, Birkbeck was one of the first institutes in the UK to have all the equipment that was needed for crystallography. This included some of the country’s first “large” computers. One of the first electronic stored-program computers was developed in Donald Booth’s laboratory here in the 1950s. In the mid-1960s the college had an ATLAS computer with a total memory of 96 kB. It occupied the basements of two houses in Gordon Square, and crystallographers used it to calculate electron density maps of small molecules. Protein crystallography only “took off” in the 1970s with further improvements in computing and automation of much of the experimental technique.

Today, protein crystallography can almost be said to be routine. The first step, crystallising the protein, can still be an important bottleneck, but data collection at powerful synchrotron X-ray sources is extremely rapid and structures can be solved quite easily with user-friendly software that runs on ordinary laptops. There are now over 100,000 protein structures freely available in the Protein Data Bank (PDB), and about 90% of these were obtained using X-ray crystallography. The techniques used to obtain the other 10,000 or so, nuclear magnetic resonance and electron microscopy, are more specialised.

Moss ended his talk by describing one of the proteins solved in his group during his long career at Birkbeck: a bacterial toxin that is responsible for the disease gas gangrene (PDB 1CA1). This destroys muscle cells by punching holes in their membranes, and its victims usually have to have limbs amputated to save their lives. Knowing the structure has allowed scientists to understand how this toxin works, which is the first step towards developing drugs to stop it. But you can learn even more about how proteins work if you also understand how they move. Observing and modelling protein motion in “real time” still poses many challenges for scientists as the second century of crystallography begins.

Structure of alpha-toxin, the key Clostridium perfringen toxin in gas gangrene. Image from the PDB.

Thursday, 6 March 2014

Crystallins under the Lens

Written by Jill Faircloth

For generations, anyone who argued against evolutionary theory would point to the human eye and exclaim that nothing so perfectly adapted to its purpose could have evolved in a series of random steps. The well-rehearsed counter argument is that even a very basic recognition of light and shadow via an organic pinhole camera is useful as an aid to survival and that this could provide the first stepping stone towards the sophistication of the vertebrate eye (see references 1 and 2). The theory is supported by a succession of organisms with gradually increasing vision.

On a molecular level, the proof is harder to achieve but Christine Slingsby of Birkbeck's Department of Biological Sciences has used crystallography to do just that. In investigating the structure of the proteins of the vertebrate eye lens, Slingsby has not only greatly increased our understanding of their characteristics and mechanisms but also provided fascinating insights into their evolution.

Professor Slingsby's work is featured in several pages in the PPS course: Greek Key Motif, Beta Sandwiches, Lens Proteins and Cataract and Eukaryotic Genomes. Last year she published a paper (reference 3 here) which summarised the key conclusions of her research during the last ten years. This review is available in the Birkbeck e-library here.

Vertebrate lenses comprise layers of highly elongated fibre cells which give transparency and focus but the refractive power is given by high concentrations of transparent proteins from two superfamilies: the alpha crystallins and the beta-gamma crystallins. These proteins, which are all mainly made up of beta strands, have been co-opted from their original functions to generate a functioning lens.

You don’t need to look far to find the probable origin of α crystallins. They are small heat shock proteins (sHsps), molecular chaperones that are present in most types of cell in most organisms. They are upregulated: that is, produced in greater quantities, by cells under environmental stress as part of the protein homeostasis response.

Despite their name, βγ crystallins are unrelated to α crystallins; all crystallins interact to form a refractive index gradient which can vary as required. Apart from the vertebrate lens where they are very prevalent, and in stark contrast to α crystallins, βγ crystallins are found only in other vertebrate eye tissues (except as a component of a much larger gene/protein known as Aim1) and this makes their origin harder to identify. Beta and gamma crystallins each contain four Greek key motifs organised as two βγ-crystallin domains.

There are several requirements for an eye lens protein. It must be expressed at very high levels, unlike sHsps, so the sHsp gene promoters would have required modification. The proteins must pack tightly and uniformly enough so that there is no irregularity on the scale of the wavelength of light and they must be soluble but must not crystallise or separate into different phases. In addition, lens fibre cells have lost their organelles, which could cause light scattering, and so have no mechanisms for protein repair or disintegration. Accordingly, these proteins need to have a lifespan as long as the vertebrate using them.

One of the main reasons for crystallins having been adopted as lens proteins could be that the two α crystallins are able to dynamically form polymers with highly diverse size and shape. This ability was demonstrated as the first crystal structure of a sHsp revealed a hollow octahedral structure of 24 α crystallin monomers. The next one to be solved showed point group 32 symmetry and was constructed from six dimers arranged in two interlocking rings.

This figure shows the beta-sandwich structure of the alpha-crystallin domain of a monomer, the formation of the dimer with the B6 beta strand exchanging into the partner beta-sandwich, and the oligomer with six dimers forming interconnecting discs. The dimers link using motifs on the C terminal extension which insert into the pocket between the B4 and B8 strands, shown in dark blue, and by interaction of the N terminal helices.

Figure taken from Slingsby, C. et al. (2013. PDB 1GME

In addition to the wide range of alpha-crystallin oligomers, the numerous βγ-crystallin chains can be assembled to create a wide range of polymers which coexist in a polydisperse stable but flexible arrangement of varying density.

Beta-crystallins thus appear to function in a similar way to α-crystallins, forming a diverse range of differently sized hetero-oligomers that adjust the refractive index throughout the lens.

Gamma crystallins are different because they are monomeric and polar. They are present in differing concentrations throughout the lens and their polarity results in distinctive orientations towards other crystallins which may regulate inter-crystallin interactions. There is evidence that disruption of these dipoles results in cataracts.

By examining genomes of organisms which predate the development of the camera eye, Slingsby has shed light on the evolutionary pathway of crystallins as lens proteins. PPS students will bave read about the single-domain βγ-crystallin in the urochordate (invertebrate) sea squirt, Ciona intestinalis, that has exactly the same double Greek key structure as a vertebrate crystallin but includes a calcium binding sequence in each Greek key motif. This ancestral link was further demonstrated by the remarkable discovery that the gene promoter for Ciona-crystallin could successfully target reporter gene expression for proteins associated with vision in vertebrates.

Investigation of the genome of a cephalochordate, which is part of the lineage of both vertebrates and urochordates, revealed a less complex ancestor to βγ-crystallins. Signature sequences from the βγ-crystallins have also been found in bacterial and archaeal proteins. The implication of this is that all of the proteins of the vertebrate lens could well have evolved from proteins present in ancient species with no visual function. An interesting twist is introduced by the knowledge that the nonchordates, or animals without a spine, can use quite similar cellular lenses that involve non-crystallin proteins.

This suggests that lenses evolved independently in different animal kingdoms, relatively late on an evolutionary timescale, utilizing different proteins that were available in the respective phyla, that is proteins which already had an established purpose but which had qualities allowing them to form lenses. Since all species seem to have had access to at least a basic form of βγ-crystallin, it is an impressive demonstration that evolution can not only capitalise on the multiple possibilities presented by one family of proteins to develop a functioning visual system, but also repeat the trick from a different starting point.

References

  1. Dawkins, R. (1994). The eye in a twinkling. Nature 368, 690-691
  2. Nilsson, D.E., Pelger, S. (1994). A pessimistic estimate of the time required for an eye to evolve. Proc. Biol. Sci. 256(1345): 53-8.
  3. Slingsby, C., Wistow, G.J. and Clark, A.R. (2013). Evolution of crystallins for a role in the vertebrate eye lens. Protein Sci. 22(4):367-80.

Friday, 6 December 2013

A Very Short History of Crystallography

You might possibly have been intrigued to read in my last post that 2014 has been designated as the International Year of Crystallography. This year was chosen to celebrate the fact that this discipline - the study of atomic and molecular structure through their crystal forms - is now almost exactly a hundred years old. Admittedly, the first paper in the discipline, rather charmingly titled just "The diffraction of short electro-magnetic waves by a crystal" was published in 1913, and the Nobel Prize awarded two years later, but 2014 is at least a good compromise.

It can be said, perhaps simplistically, that crystallography was invented by the father-and-son team of William Henry and William Lawrence (known as Lawrence) Bragg, at the Universities of Leeds and Cambridge in the UK. The Braggs, however, did not aim to found a new discipline or even to investigate the atomic properties of matter. They were more interested in solving a problem that had been puzzling the cleverest physicists in the world for almost two decades. X-rays had been discovered by Wilhelm Rőntgen in Germany in 1895, but their very name (the unknown X) suggests reveals their controversial nature. Were they particles or waves?

The older Bragg, William, was convinced that X-rays were particles, and set out to prove this to his son (who favoured the wave theory) by exploiting the discovery of another German physicist, von Laue, that X-rays shone at a crystal were scattered and could produce a pattern on a film. Lawrence was the first to realise that these patterns could be explained by the theory that the X-rays were reflected from planes of atoms in the crystal and interfered with each other.

Lawrence presented these results to the Cambridge Philosophical Society late in 1912 and published them in the paper mentioned above the following year. This paper also included the first formulation of one of the best known of all laws of physics: Bragg's Law. This relates the wavelength of incoming X-rays and the angles that they are scattered (diffracted) to the spacing between planes of atoms in a crystal, enabling scientists to determine the geometry of atomic crystal lattices.

The Braggs worked together in Leeds and published their first structures, including that of sodium chloride (common salt) before Lawrence was sent to France to fight in the First World War. He was in the trenches when he heard that he and his father had been awarded the 1915 Nobel Prize for Physics; that news reached him shortly after that of the death of his brother Robert. At only 25, he was (and still remains) the youngest ever recipient of a Nobel Prize.

Technical advances between the wars enabled scientists working in this new discipline to solve the structures of rather more complex molecules. Kathleen Lansdale, one many women who began their research careers as the Braggs' students, solved the structures of benzene derivatives and was the first to see that aromatic rings were flat. And two later developments paved the way for the explosion in structural science that characterised the later twentieth century. In 1934, John Desmond (J.D.) Bernal, who later became the first head of the School of Crystallography at Birkbeck (the predecessor department of our Biological Sciences) and his student Dorothy Crowfoot (later Hodgkin) obtained the first X-ray diffraction patterns from protein crystals. And in the following year Lindo Patterson developed a function that greatly simplified the mathematics involved in structure determination.

Even fifty years ago however, solving crystal structures was a long and at times tedious business. A typical crystallogaphy PhD thesis of the 1960s or 1970s would contain the structures of maybe three small or medium-sized molecules. It is now possible to generate as many in a few hours, so it is possible to see clearly how structures of molecules respond to changes in conditios such as temperature and pressure.

All these discoveries have been made possible by advances in technology, and particularly by the development of synchrotron radiation as a source of powerful beams of X-rays. Synchrotron radiation is produced when charged particles are accelerated radially, and synchrotrons built primarily as X-ray sources were first built in the 1980s. The UK's synchrotron, Diamond at Harwell in Oxfordshire, is currently the fifth largest in the world. It has 23 separate "beamlines", each providing a beam of X-rays with properties that have been optimised for a particular experimental technique.

Synchrotrons provide facilities for solving structures from single crystals of large and small molecules, including, of course, proteins, and from micro-crystalline samples (the latter technique is known as powder diffraction). Although structural biology attracts much of the attention (see almost all the other posts on this blog) structures of smaller molecules can still provide important insights. Sandy Blake, a crystallographer at the University of Nottingham, is using Diamond beamlines to solve the structures of novel materials called metal-organic frameworks or MOFs that are able to store gases including hydrogen (which is a potential fuel source) and greenhouse gases.

At 100, crystallography is still a young discipline but it has radically transformed many other areas of science and, through them, the world we inhabit today. This has been reflected in decisions made by the Nobel committees over the decades. The International Union of Crystallography maintains a list of Nobels awarded for ‘achievements directly related to, or involving the use of, crystallography’. There are now 29 of these, and the latest year with no crystallography-related Nobel was 2008. Even the 2013 Chemistry prize, awarded to Martin Karplus, Michael Levitt and Arieh Warshel, appears on the list: their discipline of computational chemistry would be impossible without structural knowledge obtained through crystallography.

And it almost goes without saying that protein structure, and structural biology more generally - the disciplines taught in this course and its associated MSc - owe their existence to the development of X-ray crystallography.

This blog post is based on an article I wrote for the Royal Society of Chemistry's membership journal, Chemistry World. It will be published in the January 2014 issue of the journal.

Monday, 7 October 2013

Welcome to PPS Students 2013-14!

This post is very like one I wrote at exactly this time last year. This is because what I have to say now is very, very similar...

I would like to offer a warm welcome to the Principles of Protein Structure blog to all students who have just started studying Birkbeck's Principles of Protein Structure course!

I run this blog to link the material that you will be studying in the course to new research developments in the areas of protein structure and function and related aspects of biotechnology and medicine. Throughout the taught course (but more often in the later part of the course) I will post reports of recent developments. I might, example, report on talks given in the ISMB seminar series run jointly by the Department of Biological Sciences at Birkbeck and research departments in neighbouring University College London. The overall title of the programme for Autumn 2013 is Molecular Mechanisms of Intracellular Trafficking: an important topic that relates quite closely to some of the material we cover in the later sections of the course. Other posts may be reports from conferences or summaries of recently published papers in protein structure, protein bioinformatics and allied areas.

And one topic that you are bound to hear more of on this blog, particularly after the New Year, is the history of structural science, particularly X-ray crystallography. Crystallography was the first method to be developed for solving the structure of biological macromolecules, and it is still the most important. The United Nations has designated 2014 as the International Year of Crystallography - the date is between the centenaries of the publication of the first papers on X-ray diffraction and the award of the 1915 Nobel Prize for Physics to the father-and-son team of William and Lawrence Bragg who made the principal discoveries.

Some of the posts on this blog are written by "guest blogger" Jill Faircloth, who took the MSc in Structural Molecular Biology a few years ago and is now working as a freelance science communicator. She introduces herself in this post written in March 2012, in which she also describes how she found the later part of the PPS course and her thoughts on the two choices available for the second year of the MSc.

Do, if you get a chance, look through some of the earlier blog posts to see the kind of topics that we will be discussing. However, don't be discouraged if at this stage of the course you find the science presented there difficult to understand. I can assure you that it will get easier!

And the best of luck for the 2013-14 PPS course and for your studies at Birkbeck! We hope that many of you will go on to complete our MSc in Structural Molecular Biology.

Best wishes,

Dr Clare Sansom
Senior Associate Lecturer, Biological Sciences, Birkbeck and Tutor, Principles of Protein Structure

Friday, 6 January 2012

BCA Winter Meeting: Structures of Supramolecular Assemblies

The British Crystallographic Association (BCA) is a national organisation set up to support all types of crystallography in the UK. It is affiliated to the International Union of Crystallography and has five special interest groups, one of which, the Biological Structures Group, is devoted to the study, by crystallography, of proteins and other biological macromolecules. One of the Biological Structure Group's main activities is its annual Winter Meeting, which conventionally takes place just before the Christmas break. This is always well attended by students and post-docs; the speakers, however, are generally senior scientists presenting some of their most exciting recent research in protein structure.

The 2011 BCA Winter Meeting was held at the Diamond Light Source, the country's national synchroton facility (which is located at Harwell, near Didcot in Oxfordshire. When it opened in 1997 it was the largest scientific facility to be built in the UK for over thirty years. Synchrotons like Diamond generate highly intense, monochromatic (single-wavelength) beams of electromagnetic radiation that are used for many types of scientific experiment, including X-rays for crystallography. The theory behind how X-ray diffraction is used to solve the structuresof proteins is not covered in PPS, but it is in both the courses that can be taken for the second year of the MSc: fairly briefly in the general Techniques for Structural Molecular Biology course and very extensively in a specialist course.

This meeting took "Structures of Supramolecular Assemblies" as its theme and featured nine distinguished speakers, discussing complex structures, biological mechanisms and protein-protein interactions. And the first speaker was none other than the head of the Department of Biological Sciences at Birkbeck, Professor Gabriel Waksman. His ground-breaking work on the structure and mechanism of fibres that form at the outer membrane of bacteria such as E. coli to attach to the host cells has been discussed previously on this blog (e.g. in June 2011) and so will not be described in more detail here.

Waksman's talk was followed by two more describing proteins and protein complexes that are embedded in the membranes of bacterial cells. The first of these was given by Colin Kleanthous from the University of York, who described proteins involved in signalling through porins, proteins that form pores in the outer membranes of Gram negative bacteria. Porins were the first transmembrane proteins to be discovered where the membrane-spanning region forms a beta barrel rather than a bundle of alpha helices. Very many alpha-helical membrane proteins pass signals into cells from their environment, with the signal arising when ligand binding triggers the receptor to either dimerise or make a subtle change in its structure (conformation). Colicins are protein antibiotics that are synthesised by bacteria, often to kill very similar bacteria that occupy the same ecological niche. They do this by "parasitizing" the porins through which nutrients enter the target bacteria, a particularly difficult task as porins act as filters that generally allow only "nutrient-sized" molecules (less than about 600Da) to enter cells. Kleanthous described the structures and mechanisms of the "outer membrane translocation" domains of several colicins bound to porins; his group is now trying to solve the structures of intact colicin-porin complexes using both crystallography and electron microscopy.

Leo Sazanov from the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge then described the structure of respiratory complex I, which is embedded in the bacterial inner membrane.. This is the first enzyme in the respiratory chain, and it is found in mitochondria as well as bacteria: the respiratory complex I in human mitochondria has been implicated in the pathology of Parkinson's disease.  The bacterial enzyme complex is smaller and simpler than the human one and is often used as a model system. Sazanov and his group crystallised the complete complex from Thermus thermophilus, a "thermophilic" bacterium that can live in extremely hot conditions. Proteins from thermophilic bacteria are often more stable and easier to crystallise than their equivalents in other species. The complete structure was found to contain no fewer than 63 transmembrane helices, 14 in each of three similar subunits. Sazanov discovered that this protein's mechanism involves a quite substantial conformational change between its oxidised and reduced form; an analogy with coupling rods has led the protein to be described as the "steam engine of the cell". It featured, in similar terms on the front cover of the issue of Nature in which the structure was described (Efremov et al. (2010), Nature 465, 441-5).

Nature cover illustrating the structure of respiratory complex I
About 5% of all proteins in an "average" bacterium are synthesised in response to heat or other stress signals. Stresssosomes are large multi-protein complexes found in bacteria and that control this stress response through the release of another protein, known as the sigma factor. Rick Lewis from the University of Newcastle described how the overall structure of a stressosome from Bacillus subtilis has been solved by electron microscopy and structures of some of the individual components by crystallography.  He is using these structures to explore the mechanism through which the stressosome senses the presence of stress conditions. Although several pieces of the stress response pathway still remain to be discovered, his group has shown how the system could respond to differences in levels of light and oxygen (the latter through the presence of a globin domain in one of the stressome proteins), how it could regulate the production of diguanylate cyclase, and how the system is re-set through the action of a serine/threonine phosphatase (the structure of which was solved at Diamond).

Helen Walden of Cancer Research UK described how her group's structural studies are shedding light on the mechanism of a DNA repair pathway that is damaged in Fanconi anaemia, a rare genetic disorder that causes, among other things, a greatly increased susceptibility to one form of leukaemia. This repair pathway, which fixes cross-links in DNA, is triggered by the single ubiquitinylation of a DNA repair protein. (This is the fusion of a small protein known as ubiquitin with a target protein.) The process is triggered when cross-links cause DNA to stop replicating; the first step is the assembly, in the nucleus, of eight proteins into a "core complex" in the nucleus. The core complex then activates another protein, known as FANCL, and this catalyses the fusion of ubiquitin with the DNA repair protein, activating it. The structure of FANCL was recently solved in Walden's group by Ambrose Cole, who is now a post-doc at Birkbeck (PDB 3ZQS). Interestingly, the structure of this protein is not the beta-propellor that was predicted by sequence analysis; instead, it contains two domains similar to the ubiquitin conjugating enzyme UBC. Mutations that abolish ubiquitin binding are known to cause disease.
These are only a few highlights of  a fascinating day's science. Other, no less interesting, structures presented there included several viral proteins: the HIV integrase bound to some of its inhibitors, presented by Peter Cherepanov (Imperial College London); the nucleoprotein from the virus that causes Lassa fever, described by Chang-jing Dong (University of St. Andrew's); and the NS1 protein from the influenza virus, described by Phil Kerry, also from St. Andrew's