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SAD at home: solving the structure of oxalate decarboxylase with the anomalous signal from manganese using X‐ray data collected on a home source
Author(s) -
Stevenson Clare E. M.,
Tanner Adam,
Bowater Laura,
Bornemann Stephen,
Lawson David M.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
acta crystallographica section d
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1399-0047
DOI - 10.1107/s0907444904023996
Subject(s) - manganese , signal (programming language) , oxalate , chemistry , computer science , materials science , inorganic chemistry , metallurgy , programming language
Oxalate decarboxylase (OxdC) from Bacillus subtilis is a hexamer containing two manganese ions per 43.6 kDa subunit. A single highly redundant data set collected at a medium resolution of 2 Å on an in‐house X‐ray source was sufficient to solve the structure by the single‐wavelength anomalous diffraction (SAD) method using the anomalous signal from the manganese ions. The experimentally phased electron‐density map was of high quality, enabling 96% of the amino‐acid sequence to be automatically traced using ARP / wARP . Further analysis showed that only half of the original raw data were required for successful structure solution. Manganese currently occurs in approximately 2% of PDB entries. A brief survey suggests that several of these structures could also have been determined using manganese SAD. Moreover, the ability of manganese to substitute for other more commonly occurring divalent metal ions may indicate that the use of Mn SAD could have much wider application.

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