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Twinned crystals and anomalous phasing
Author(s) -
Dauter Zbigniew
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
acta crystallographica section d
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1399-0047
DOI - 10.1107/s0907444903021085
Subject(s) - crystal twinning , diffraction , phaser , materials science , crystallography , crystal (programming language) , molecular replacement , crystal structure , anomalous scattering , optics , physics , chemistry , computer science , microstructure , programming language
Merohedral or pseudomerohedral twinning of crystals cannot be identified from inspection of the diffraction patterns. Several methods for the identification of twinning and the estimation of the twin fraction are suitable for macro­molecular crystals and all are based on the statistical properties of the measured diffraction intensities. If the crystal twin fraction is estimated and is not too close to 0.5, the diffraction data can be detwinned; that is, related to the individual crystal specimen. However, the detwinning procedure invariably introduces additional inaccuracies to the estimated intensities, which substantially increase when the twin fraction approaches 0.5. In some cases, a crystal structure can be solved with the original twinned data by standard techniques such as molecular replacement, multiple isomorphous replacement or multiwavelength anomalous diffraction. Test calculations on data collected from a twinned crystal of gpD, the bacteriophage λ capsid protein, show that the single‐wavelength anomalous diffraction (SAD) method can be used to solve its structure even if the data set corresponds to a perfectly twinned crystal with a twin fraction of 0.5.

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