Structure of tetragonal hen egg-white lysozyme at 0.94 A from crystals grown by the counter-diffusion method.
Sauter, C., Otalora, F., Gavira, J.A., Vidal, O., Giege, R., Garcia-Ruiz, J.M.(2001) Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 57: 1119-1126
- PubMed: 11468395 
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/s0907444901008873
- Primary Citation of Related Structures:  
1IEE - PubMed Abstract: 
Very high quality crystals of tetragonal hen egg-white lysozyme were grown in the Advanced Protein Crystallization Facility (APCF) on board the Space Shuttle using a modified free-interface diffusion (FID) reactor designed ad hoc to have a longer diffusion path. This design allows the performance of true counter-diffusion experiments. Crystals were obtained under the classical chemical conditions defined 50 y ago with NaCl as a crystallizing agent and acetate pH 4.5 as a buffer. Counter-diffusion crystallization allows a "physical" instead of chemical optimization of growth conditions: indeed, this method screens for the best supersaturation conditions in a single trial and yields crystals of very high quality. A complete diffraction data set was collected at atomic resolution from one of these crystals using synchrotron radiation at the DESY-EMBL beamlines. The overall R(merge) on intensities in the resolution range 31-0.94 A was 5.2% and the data were 98.9% complete. Refinement was carried out with the programs CNS and SHELX97 to a final crystallographic R factor of 12.26% for 72 390 reflections. A mean standard uncertainty in the atomic positions of 0.024 A was estimated from inversion of blocked least-squares matrices. 22 side chains show alternate conformations and the loop 59-75 adopts in the same crystal packing two conformations that were observed for either triclinic or tetragonal lysozyme in previous high-resolution studies. In addition to 255 water molecules, the crystallizing agent (one hexacoordinated sodium ion and five chloride anions) participates in the ordered lysozyme hydration shell.
Organizational Affiliation: 
UPR 9002, Département Mécanismes et Molécules de la Synthèse Protéique et Cristallogenèse, Institut de Biologie Moléculaire et Cellulaire, 15 Rue René Descartes, F-67084 Strasbourg CEDEX, France.