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Time-Resolved Crystallography using X-ray Free-Electron Laser

Posted on:2016-10-11Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:Arizona State UniversityCandidate:Basu, ShibomFull Text:PDF
GTID:2470390017980870Subject:Biophysics
Abstract/Summary:
Photosystem II (PSII) is a large protein-cofactor complex. The first step in photosynthesis involves the harvesting of light energy from the sun by the antenna (made of pigments) of the PSII trans-membrane complex. The harvested excitation energy is transferred from the antenna complex to the reaction center of the PSII, which leads to a light-driven charge separation event, from water to plastoquinone. This phenomenal process has been producing the oxygen that maintains the oxygenic environment of our planet for the past 2.5 billion years.;The oxygen molecule formation involves the light-driven extraction of 4 electrons and protons from two water molecules through a multistep reaction, in which the Oxygen Evolving Center (OEC) of PSII cycles through 5 different oxidation states, S0 to S4. Unraveling the water-splitting mechanism remains as a grant challenge in the field of photosynthesis research. This requires the development of an entirely new capability, the ability to produce molecular movies. This dissertation advances a novel technique, Serial Femtosecond X-ray crystallography (SFX), into a new realm whereby such time-resolved molecular movies may be attained. The ultimate goal is to make a "molecular movie" that reveals the dynamics of the water splitting mechanism using time-resolved SFX (TRSFX) experiments and the uniquely enabling features of X-ray Free-Electron Laser (XFEL) for the study of biological processes.;This thesis presents the development of SFX techniques, including development of new methods to analyze millions of diffraction patterns (~100 terabytes of data per XFEL experiment) with the goal of solving the X-ray structures in different transition states. ii The research comprises significant advancements to XFEL software packages (e.g., Cheetah and CrystFEL). Initially these programs could evaluate only 8-10% of all the data acquired successfully. This research demonstrates that with manual optimizations, the evaluation success rate was enhanced to 40-50%. These improvements have enabled TR-SFX, for the first time, to examine the double excited state (S 3) of PSII at 5.5-A. This breakthrough demonstrated the first indication of conformational changes between the ground (S1) and the double-excited (S3) states, a result fully consistent with theoretical predictions.;The power of the TR-SFX technique was further demonstrated with proof-of principle experiments on Photoactive Yellow Protein (PYP) micro-crystals that high temporal (10-ns) and spatial (1.5-A) resolution structures could be achieved.;In summary, this dissertation research heralds the development of the TR-SFX technique, protocols, and associated data analysis methods that will usher into practice a new era in structural biology for the recording of 'molecular movies' of any biomolecular process.
Keywords/Search Tags:PSII, X-ray, Time-resolved, New
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