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3K9G

CRYSTAL STRUCTURE OF A PLASMID PARTITION PROTEIN FROM BORRELIA BURGDORFERI AT 2.25A RESOLUTION, iodide soak

Summary for 3K9G
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb3k9g/pdb
Related3K9H
DescriptorPF-32 protein, SODIUM ION, IODIDE ION, ... (4 entities in total)
Functional Keywordsssgcid, sbri, decode biostructures, uw, nih, niaid, borellia burgdorferi, plasmid partition protein, iodide, sad phasing, structural genomics, seattle structural genomics center for infectious disease, biosynthetic protein
Biological sourceBorrelia burgdorferi (Lyme disease spirochete)
Total number of polymer chains1
Total formula weight32530.66
Authors
Seattle Structural Genomics Center for Infectious Disease (SSGCID) (deposition date: 2009-10-15, release date: 2009-11-03, Last modification date: 2024-02-21)
Primary citationAbendroth, J.,Gardberg, A.S.,Robinson, J.I.,Christensen, J.S.,Staker, B.L.,Myler, P.J.,Stewart, L.J.,Edwards, T.E.
SAD phasing using iodide ions in a high-throughput structural genomics environment.
J Struct Funct Genomics, 12:83-95, 2011
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: The Seattle Structural Genomics Center for Infectious Disease (SSGCID) focuses on the structure elucidation of potential drug targets from class A, B, and C infectious disease organisms. Many SSGCID targets are selected because they have homologs in other organisms that are validated drug targets with known structures. Thus, many SSGCID targets are expected to be solved by molecular replacement (MR), and reflective of this, all proteins are expressed in native form. However, many community request targets do not have homologs with known structures and not all internally selected targets readily solve by MR, necessitating experimental phase determination. We have adopted the use of iodide ion soaks and single wavelength anomalous dispersion (SAD) experiments as our primary method for de novo phasing. This method uses existing native crystals and in house data collection, resulting in rapid, low cost structure determination. Iodide ions are non-toxic and soluble at molar concentrations, facilitating binding at numerous hydrophobic or positively charged sites. We have used this technique across a wide range of crystallization conditions with successful structure determination in 16 of 17 cases within the first year of use (94% success rate). Here we present a general overview of this method as well as several examples including SAD phasing of proteins with novel folds and the combined use of SAD and MR for targets with weak MR solutions. These cases highlight the straightforward and powerful method of iodide ion SAD phasing in a high-throughput structural genomics environment.
PubMed: 21359836
DOI: 10.1007/s10969-011-9101-7
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
X-RAY DIFFRACTION (2.25 Å)
Structure validation

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