PMC 20201222 pmc.key 4854314 CC BY no 1 1 RNA protects a nucleoprotein complex against radiation damage ACSDAD 10.1107/S2059798316003351 S2059798316003351 4854314 27139628 rr5121 648 Pt 5 radiation damage protein–RNA complex electron difference density specific damage decarboxylation This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited. 657 surname:Bury;given-names:Charles S. surname:McGeehan;given-names:John E. surname:Antson;given-names:Alfred A. surname:Carmichael;given-names:Ian surname:Gerstel;given-names:Markus surname:Shevtsov;given-names:Mikhail B. surname:Garman;given-names:Elspeth F. TITLE front 72 2016 0 RNA protects a nucleoprotein complex against radiation damage 0.9980228 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:34:01Z nucleoprotein ABSTRACT abstract 62 Systematic analysis of radiation damage within a protein–RNA complex over a large dose range (1.3–25 MGy) reveals significant differential susceptibility of RNA and protein. A new method of difference electron-density quantification is presented. complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:04:56Z protein–RNA 0.9902272 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9882428 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:16:13Z MESH: difference electron-density quantification ABSTRACT abstract 315 Radiation damage during macromolecular X-ray crystallographic data collection is still the main impediment for many macromolecular structure determinations. Even when an eventual model results from the crystallographic pipeline, the manifestations of radiation-induced structural and conformation changes, the so-called specific damage, within crystalline macromolecules can lead to false interpretations of biological mechanisms. Although this has been well characterized within protein crystals, far less is known about specific damage effects within the larger class of nucleoprotein complexes. Here, a methodology has been developed whereby per-atom density changes could be quantified with increasing dose over a wide (1.3–25.0 MGy) range and at higher resolution (1.98 Å) than the previous systematic specific damage study on a protein–DNA complex. Specific damage manifestations were determined within the large trp RNA-binding attenuation protein (TRAP) bound to a single-stranded RNA that forms a belt around the protein. Over a large dose range, the RNA was found to be far less susceptible to radiation-induced chemical changes than the protein. The availability of two TRAP molecules in the asymmetric unit, of which only one contained bound RNA, allowed a controlled investigation into the exact role of RNA binding in protein specific damage susceptibility. The 11-fold symmetry within each TRAP ring permitted statistically significant analysis of the Glu and Asp damage patterns, with RNA binding unexpectedly being observed to protect these otherwise highly sensitive residues within the 11 RNA-binding pockets distributed around the outside of the protein molecule. Additionally, the method enabled a quantification of the reduction in radiation-induced Lys and Phe disordering upon RNA binding directly from the electron density. experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:16:36Z macromolecular X-ray crystallographic data collection experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:50Z macromolecular structure determinations 0.93006164 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:27:59Z DUMMY: crystals 0.9697803 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:01Z DUMMY: per-atom density changes chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z DNA 0.9563537 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:26:59Z MESH: trp RNA-binding attenuation protein 0.53643787 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.99148065 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:33:37Z DUMMY: bound to 0.9971852 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.99032986 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.937143 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.9731102 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:39Z DUMMY: bound 0.99720335 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z RNA 0.8899272 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:58:12Z ring 0.9860465 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:06Z SO: Glu 0.9869811 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:09Z SO: Asp chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z RNA 0.9977442 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:01:06Z SO: RNA-binding pockets 0.9823989 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:11Z SO: Lys 0.9763282 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:13Z SO: Phe 0.652342 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9961912 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:04Z DUMMY: electron density INTRO title_1 2173 Introduction   INTRO paragraph 2190 With the wide use of high-flux third-generation synchrotron sources, radiation damage (RD) has once again become a dominant reason for the failure of structure determination using macromolecular crystallography (MX) in experiments conducted both at room temperature and under cryocooled conditions (100 K). Significant progress has been made in recent years in understanding the inevitable manifestations of X-ray-induced RD within protein crystals, and there is now a body of literature on possible strategies to mitigate the effects of RD (e.g. Zeldin, Brockhauser et al., 2013; Bourenkov & Popov, 2010). However, there is still no general consensus within the field on how to minimize RD during MX data collection, and debates on the dependence of RD progression on incident X-ray energy (Shimizu et al., 2007; Liebschner et al., 2015) and the efficacy of radical scavengers (Allan et al., 2013) have yet to be resolved. 0.8348757 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:23Z MESH: structure determination 0.98041725 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:25Z MESH: macromolecular crystallography 0.56438595 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:29Z MESH: MX 0.9865131 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:34Z DUMMY: crystals 0.9509965 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:30Z MESH: MX INTRO paragraph 3116 RD manifests in two forms. Global radiation damage is observed within reciprocal space as the overall decay of the summed intensity of reflections detected within the diffraction pattern as dose increases (Garman, 2010; Murray & Garman, 2002). Dose is defined as the absorbed energy per unit mass of crystal in grays (Gy; 1 Gy = 1 J kg−1), and is the metric against which damage progression should be monitored during MX data collection, as opposed to time. At 100 K, an experimental dose limit of 30 MGy has been recommended as an upper limit beyond which the biological information derived from any macromolecular crystal may be compromised (Owen et al., 2006). 0.9363032 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:19:18Z DUMMY: diffraction pattern 0.96844155 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:30Z MESH: MX 0.91692525 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:31:01Z DUMMY: crystal INTRO paragraph 3792 Specific radiation damage (SRD) is observed in the real-space electron density, and has been detected at much lower doses than any observable decay in the intensity of reflections. Indeed, the C—Se bond in selenomethionine, the stability of which is key for the success of experimental phasing methods, can be cleaved at a dose as low as 2 MGy for a crystal maintained at 100 K (Holton, 2007). SRD has been well characterized in a large range of proteins, and is seen to follow a reproducible order: metallo-centre reduction, disulfide-bond cleavage, acidic residue decarboxylation and methionine methylthio cleavage (Ravelli & McSweeney, 2000; Burmeister, 2000; Weik et al., 2000; Yano et al., 2005). Furthermore, damage susceptibility within each residue type follows a preferential ordering influenced by a combination of local environment factors (solvent accessibility, conformational strain, proximity to active sites/high X-ray cross-section atoms; Holton, 2009). Deconvoluting the individual roles of these parameters has been surprisingly challenging, with factors such as solvent accessibility currently under active investigation (Weik et al., 2000; Fioravanti et al., 2007; Gerstel et al., 2015). experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:19:00Z Specific radiation damage experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:19:10Z SRD 0.9674265 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:31:05Z DUMMY: real-space electron density 0.28211054 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:29:47Z CHEBI: Se 0.9843067 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:29:51Z CHEBI: selenomethionine 0.9706023 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:31:07Z DUMMY: crystal ptm MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:30:47Z disulfide-bond INTRO paragraph 5008 There are a number of cases where SRD manifestations have compromised the biological information extracted from MX-determined structures at much lower doses than the recommended 30 MGy limit, leading to false structural interpretations of protein mechanisms. Active-site residues appear to be particularly susceptible, particularly for photosensitive proteins and in instances where chemical strain is an intrinsic feature of the reaction mechanism. For instance, structure determination of the purple membrane protein bacterio­rhodopsin required careful corrections for radiation-induced structural changes before the correct photosensitive intermediate states could be isolated (Matsui et al., 2002). The significant chemical strain required for catalysis within the active site of phosphoserine aminotransferase has been observed to diminish during X-ray exposure (Dubnovitsky et al., 2005). 0.9724948 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:31:22Z MESH: MX-determined 0.9942268 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:19:53Z DUMMY: structures 0.9978055 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:01:17Z SO: Active-site residues 0.99299383 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:31:25Z MESH: structure determination 0.84919345 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:31:44Z MESH: bacterio­rhodopsin 0.99806416 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:01:21Z SO: active site 0.9870368 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:31:34Z MESH: phosphoserine aminotransferase INTRO paragraph 5906 Since the majority of SRD studies to date have focused on proteins, much less is known about the effects of X-ray irradiation on the wider class of crystalline nucleoprotein complexes or how to correct for such radiation-induced structural changes. Understanding RD to such complexes is crucial, since DNA is rarely naked within a cell, instead dynamically interacting with proteins, facilitating replication, transcription, modification and DNA repair. As of early 2016, >5400 nucleoprotein complex structures have been deposited within the PDB, with 91% solved by MX. It is essential to understand how these increasingly complex macromolecular structures are affected by the radiation used to solve them. Nucleoproteins also represent one of the main targets of radiotherapy, and an insight into the damage mechanisms induced by X-ray irradiation could inform innovative treatments. experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:32:31Z SRD studies 0.5266972 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:49:23Z GO: nucleoprotein 0.6261449 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z CHEBI: DNA chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z DNA complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:33:26Z nucleoprotein 0.9936459 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:19:56Z DUMMY: structures 0.9480319 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:30Z MESH: MX 0.9201258 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:19:59Z DUMMY: structures 0.78504515 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:33:41Z GO: Nucleoproteins INTRO paragraph 6791 When a typical macromolecular crystal is irradiated with ionizing X-rays, each photoelectron produced via interactions with both the macromolecule (direct damage) and solvent (indirect damage) can induce cascades of up to 500 secondary low-energy electrons (LEEs) that are capable of inducing further ionizations. Investigations on sub-ionization-level LEEs (0–15 eV) interacting with both dried and aqueous oligonucleotides (Alizadeh & Sanche, 2014; Simons, 2006) concluded that resonant electron attachment to DNA bases and the sugar-phosphate backbone could lead to the preferential cleavage of strong (∼4 eV, 385 kJ mol−1) sugar-phosphate C—O covalent bonds within the DNA backbone and then base-sugar N1—C bonds, eventually leading to single-strand breakages (SSBs; Ptasińska & Sanche, 2007). Electrons have been shown to be mobile at 77 K by electron spin resonance spectroscopy studies (Symons, 1997; Jones et al., 1987), with rapid electron quantum tunnelling and positive hole migration along the protein backbone and through stacked DNA bases indicated as a dominant mechanism by which oxidative and reductive damage localizes at distances from initial ionization sites at 100 K (O’Neill et al., 2002). 0.9642742 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z CHEBI: DNA 0.94849676 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z CHEBI: DNA 0.99424225 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:34:36Z MESH: electron spin resonance spectroscopy 0.8569334 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z CHEBI: DNA 0.97740066 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:01:27Z SO: ionization sites INTRO paragraph 8029 The investigation of naturally forming nucleoprotein complexes circumvents the inherent challenges in making controlled comparisons of damage mechanisms between protein and nucleic acids crystallized separately. Recently, for a well characterized bacterial protein–DNA complex (C.Esp1396I; PDB entry 3clc; resolution 2.8 Å; McGeehan et al., 2008) it was concluded that over a wide dose range (2.1–44.6 MGy) the protein was far more susceptible to SRD than the DNA within the crystal (Bury et al., 2015). Only at doses above 20 MGy were precursors of phosphodiester-bond cleavage observed within AT-rich regions of the 35-mer DNA. 0.92757994 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:35:56Z MESH: crystallized taxonomy_domain DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:35:49Z bacterial chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z DNA 0.99454117 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:31:03Z GO: C.Esp1396I 0.99493873 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:33Z CHEBI: DNA 0.9964142 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:04Z DUMMY: crystal structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:28Z AT-rich regions 0.9971282 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z CHEBI: DNA INTRO paragraph 8670 For crystalline complexes such as C.Esp1396I, whether the protein is intrinsically more susceptible to X-ray-induced damage or whether the protein scavenges electrons to protect the DNA remains unclear in the absence of a non-nucleic acid-bound protein control obtained under exactly the same crystallization and data-collection conditions. To monitor the effects of nucleic acid binding on protein damage susceptibility, a crystal containing two protein molecules per asymmetric unit, only one of which was bound to RNA, is reported here (Fig. 1 ▸). Using newly developed methodology, we present a controlled SRD investigation at 1.98 Å resolution using a large (∼91 kDa) crystalline protein–RNA complex: trp RNA-binding attenuation protein (TRAP) bound to a 53 bp RNA sequence (GAGUU)10GAG (PDB entry 1gtf; Hopcroft et al., 2002). TRAP consists of 11 identical subunits assembled into a ring with 11-fold rotational symmetry. It binds with high affinity (K d ≃ 1.0 nM) to RNA segments containing 11 GAG/UAG triplets separated by two or three spacer nucleotides (Elliott et al., 2001) to regulate the transcription of tryptophan biosynthetic genes in Bacillus subtilis (Antson et al., 1999). In this structure, the bases of the G1-A2-G3 nucleotides form direct hydrogen bonds to the protein, unlike the U4-U5 nucleotides, which appear to be more flexible. 0.99455875 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:31:03Z GO: C.Esp1396I chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z DNA 0.9853733 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:08Z DUMMY: crystal 0.98737174 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:33:43Z DUMMY: bound to 0.9977902 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9718507 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:16:48Z MESH: controlled SRD complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:04:56Z protein–RNA 0.9377823 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:27:03Z MESH: trp RNA-binding attenuation protein 0.8530336 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.9948477 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:51:21Z DUMMY: bound to 0.99753857 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:38:29Z (GAGUU)10GAG 0.9524646 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:15:54Z subunits 0.5846764 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:58:12Z SO: ring 0.9860402 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:10Z DUMMY: K d 0.9952761 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9207858 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:47:16Z SO: GAG/UAG triplets structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:54:57Z spacer nucleotides 0.90775585 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:14:09Z CHEBI: tryptophan 0.99550605 species cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:37:26Z MESH: Bacillus subtilis 0.9971539 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:16Z DUMMY: structure chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:39:38Z G1-A2-G3 chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:39:55Z U4-U5 INTRO paragraph 10044 Ten successive 1.98 Å resolution MX data sets were collected from the same TRAP–RNA crystal to analyse X-ray-induced structural changes over a large dose range (d 1 = 1.3 MGy to d 10 = 25.0 MGy). To avoid the previous necessity for visual inspection of electron-density maps to detect SRD sites, a computational approach was designed to quantify the electron-density change for each refined atom with increasing dose, thus providing a rapid systematic method for SRD study on such large multimeric complexes. By employing the high 11-fold structural symmetry within each TRAP macromolecule, this approach permitted a thorough statistical quantification of the RD effects of RNA binding to TRAP. 0.947729 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:30Z MESH: MX 0.98999834 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:38:43Z GO: TRAP–RNA 0.9876061 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:40:23Z DUMMY: crystal 0.99650353 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:40:25Z DUMMY: electron-density maps 0.99333715 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:01:33Z SO: SRD sites 0.9945757 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:40:28Z DUMMY: electron-density change 0.9496573 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.99639255 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9609993 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP METHODS title_1 10748 Materials and methods   METHODS title_2 10774 RNA synthesis and protein preparation   METHODS paragraph 10816 As previously described (Hopcroft et al., 2002), the 53-base RNA (GAGUU)10GAG was synthesized by in vitro transcription with T7 RNA polymerase and gel-purified. TRAP from B. stearothermophilus was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified. METHODS title_2 11061 Crystallization   METHODS paragraph 11081 TRAP–RNA crystals were prepared using a previously established hanging-drop crystallization protocol (Antson et al., 1999). By using a 2:1 molar ratio of TRAP to RNA, crystals successfully formed from the protein–RNA complex (∼15 mg ml−1) in a solution containing 70 mM potassium phosphate pH 7.8 and 10 mM l-tryptophan. The reservoir consisted of 0.2 M potassium glutamate, 50 mM triethanol­amine pH 8.0, 10 mM MgCl2, 8–11% monomethyl ether PEG 2000. In order to accelerate crystallization, a further gradient was induced by adding 0.4 M KCl to the reservoir after 1.5 µl protein solution had been mixed with an equal volume of the reservoir solution. Wedge-shaped crystals of approximate length 70 µm (longest dimension) grew within 3 d and were vitrified and stored in liquid nitrogen immediately after growth. The cryosolution consisted of 12% monomethyl ether PEG 2000, 30 mM triethanolamine pH 8.0, 6 mM l-tryptophan, 0.1 M potassium glutamate, 35 mM potassium phosphate pH 7.8, 5 mM MgCl2 with 25% 2-methyl-2,4-pentanediol (MPD) included as a cryoprotectant. METHODS title_2 12192 X-ray data collection   METHODS paragraph 12218 Data were collected at 100 K from a wedge-shaped TRAP–RNA crystal of approximate dimensions 70 × 20 × 40 µm (see Supplementary Fig. S2) on beamline ID14-4 at the ESRF using an incident wavelength of 0.940 Å (13.2 keV) and an ADSC Q315R mosaic CCD detector at 304.5 mm from the crystal throughout the data collection. The beam size was slitted to 0.100 mm (vertical) × 0.160 mm (horizontal), with a uniformly distributed profile, such that the crystal was completely bathed within the beam throughout data collection. Ten successive (1.98 Å resolution) 180° data sets (with Δφ = 1°) were collected over the same angular range from a TRAP–RNA crystal at 28.9% beam transmission. The TRAP–RNA macromolecule crystallized in space group C2, with unit-cell parameters a = 140.9, b = 110.9, c = 137.8 Å, α = γ = 90, β = 137.8° (the values quoted are for the first data set; see Supplementary Table S1 for subsequent values). For the first nine data sets the attenuated flux was recorded to be ∼5 × 1011 photons s−1. A beam refill took place immediately before data set 10, requiring a flux-scale factor increase of 1.42 to be applied, based on the ratio of observed relative intensity I D/I 1 at data set 10 to that extrapolated from data set 9. METHODS title_2 13507 Dose calculation   METHODS paragraph 13528 RADDOSE-3D (Zeldin, Gerstel et al., 2013) was used to calculate the absorbed dose distribution during each data set (see input file; Supplementary Figs. S1 and S2). The crystal composition was calculated from the deposited TRAP–RNA structure (PDB entry 1gtf; Hopcroft et al., 2002). Crystal absorption coefficients were calculated in RADDOSE-3D using the concentration (mmol l−1) of solvent heavy elements from the crystallization conditions. The beam-intensity profile was modelled as a uniform (‘top-hat’) distribution. The diffraction-weighted dose (DWD) values (Zeldin, Brock­hauser et al., 2013) are given in Supplementary Table S1. METHODS title_2 14178 Data processing and model refinement   METHODS paragraph 14219 Each data set was integrated using iMosflm (Leslie & Powell, 2007) and was scaled using AIMLESS (Evans & Murshudov, 2013; Winn et al., 2011) using the same 5% R free set of test reflections for each data set. To phase the structure obtained from the first data set, molecular replacement was carried out with Phaser (McCoy et al., 2007), using an identical TRAP–RNA structure (PDB entry 1gtf; resolution 1.75 Å; Hopcroft et al., 2002) as a search model. The resulting TRAP–RNA structure (TR1) was refined using REFMAC5 (Murshudov et al., 2011), initially using rigid-body refinement, followed by repeated cycles of restrained, TLS and isotropic B-factor refinement, coupled with visual inspection in Coot (Emsley et al., 2010). TR1 was refined to 1.98 Å resolution, with a dimeric assembly of non-RNA-bound and RNA-bound TRAP rings within the asymmetric unit. Consistent with previous structures of the TRAP–RNA complex, the RNA sequence termini were not observed within the 2F o − F c map; the first spacer (U4) was then modelled at all 11 repeats around the TRAP ring and the second spacer (U5) was omitted from the final refined structure. For the later data sets, the observed structure-factor amplitudes from each separately scaled data set (output from AIMLESS) were combined with the phases of TR1 and the resulting higher-dose model was refined with phenix.refine (Adams et al., 2010) using only rigid-body and isotropic B-factor refinement. During this refinement, the TRAP–RNA complex and nonbound TRAP ring were treated as two separate rigid bodies within the asymmetric unit. Supplementary Table S1 shows the relevant summary statistics. METHODS title_2 15885 D loss metric calculation   METHODS paragraph 15916 The CCP4 program CAD was used to create a series of nine merged .mtz files combining observed structure-factor amplitudes for the first data set F obs(d 1) with each later data set F obs(d n) (for n = 2, …, 10). All later data sets were scaled against the initial low-dose data set in SCALEIT. For each data set an atom-tagged .map file was generated using the ATMMAP mode in SFALL (Winn et al., 2011). A full set of nine Fourier difference maps F obs(d n) − F obs(d 1) were calculated using FFT (Ten Eyck, 1973) over the full TRAP–RNA unit-cell dimensions, with the same grid-sampling dimensions as the atom-tagged .map file. All maps were cropped to the TRAP asymmetric unit in MAPMASK. Comparing the atom-tagged .map file and F obs(d n) − F obs(d 1) difference map at each dose, each refined atom was assigned a set of density-change values X. The maximum density-loss metric, D loss (units of e Å−3), was calculated to quantify the per-atom electron-density decay at each dose, assigned as the absolute magnitude of the most negative Fourier difference map voxel value in a local volume around each atom as defined by the set X. METHODS title_2 17062 Model system calculation   METHODS paragraph 17091 Model calculations were run for the simple amino acids glutamate and aspartate. In order to avoid decarboxylation at the C-terminus instead of the side chain on the Cα atom, the C-terminus of each amino acid was methylated. While the structures of the closed shell acids are well known, the same is not true of those in the oxidized state. The quantum-chemical calculations employed were chosen to provide a satisfactory description of the structure of such radical species and also provide a reliable estimation of the relative C—C(O2) bond strengths, which are otherwise not available. METHODS paragraph 17683 Structures of methyl-terminated (at the N- and C-termini) carboxylates were determined using analytic energy gradients with density functional theory (B3LYP functional; Becke, 1993) and a flexible basis set of polarized valence triple-zeta size with diffuse functions on the non-H atoms [6-311+G(d,p)] in the Gaussian 09 computational chemistry package (Frisch et al., 2009). The stationary points obtained were characterized as at least local minima by examination of the associated analytic Hessian. Effects of the medium were modelled using a dielectric cavity approach (Tomasi et al., 1999) parameterized for water. RESULTS title_1 18303 Results   RESULTS title_2 18315 Per-atom quantification of electron density   experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:50:30Z Per-atom quantification of electron density RESULTS paragraph 18363 To quantify the exact effects of nucleic acid binding to a protein on SRD susceptibility, a high-throughput and automated pipeline was created to systematically calculate the electron-density change for every refined atom within the TRAP–RNA structure as a function of dose. This provides an atom-specific quantification of density–dose dynamics, which was previously lacking within the field. Previous studies have characterized SRD sites by reporting magnitudes of F obs(d n) − F obs(d 1) Fourier difference map peaks in terms of the sigma (σ) contour level (the number of standard deviations from the mean map electron-density value) at which peaks become visible. However, these σ levels depend on the standard deviation values of the map, which can deviate between data sets, and are thus unsuitable for quantitative comparison of density between different dose data sets. Instead, we use here a maximum density-loss metric (D loss), which is the per-atom equivalent of the magnitude of these negative Fourier difference map peaks in units of e Å−3. Large positive D loss values indicate radiation-induced atomic disordering reproducibly throughout the unit cells with respect to the initial low-dose data set. 0.993571 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:24Z DUMMY: electron-density change 0.9888622 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:38:43Z GO: TRAP–RNA 0.9903577 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:28Z DUMMY: structure 0.82108414 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:32Z DUMMY: density–dose dynamics 0.9954945 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:01:39Z SO: SRD sites evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:01:56Z F obs(d n) − F obs(d 1) Fourier difference map peaks 0.88435054 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:37Z DUMMY: sigma 0.58001226 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:40Z DUMMY: σ evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:03:31Z standard deviations evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:03:02Z mean map electron-density value 0.7078795 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:44Z DUMMY: σ evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:03:19Z standard deviation 0.9917287 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:48Z DUMMY: map 0.6958162 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:51Z DUMMY: density 0.9909112 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:20:55Z DUMMY: maximum density-loss metric 0.97732365 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss 0.9871848 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:21:00Z DUMMY: negative Fourier difference map peaks 0.98676395 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss RESULTS paragraph 19592 For each TRAP–RNA data set, the D loss metric successfully identified the recognized forms of protein SRD (Fig. 2 ▸ a), with clear Glu and Asp side-chain decarboxylation even in the first difference map calculated (3.9 MGy; Fig. 3 ▸ a). The main sequence of TRAP does not contain any Trp and Cys residues (and thus contains no disulfide bonds). The substrate Trp amino-acid ligands also exhibited disordering of the free terminal carboxyl groups at higher doses (Fig. 2 ▸ a); however, no clear Fourier difference peaks could be observed visually. Even for radiation-insensitive residues (e.g. Gly) the average D loss increases with dose: this is the effect of global radiation damage, since as dose increases the electron density associated with each refined atom becomes weaker as the atomic occupancy decreases (Fig. 2 ▸ b). Only Glu and Asp residues exhibit a rate of D loss increase that consistently exceeds the average decay (Fig. 2 ▸ b, dashed line) at each dose. Additionally, the density surrounding ordered solvent molecules was determined to significantly diminish with increasing dose (Fig. 2 ▸ b). The rate of D loss (attributed to side-chain decarboxylation) was consistently larger for Glu compared with Asp residues over the large dose range (Fig. 2 ▸ b and Supplementary Fig. S3); this observation is consistent with our calculations on model systems (see above) that suggest that, without considering differential hydrogen-bonding environments, CO2 loss is more exothermic by around 8 kJ mol−1 from oxidized Glu residues than from their Asp counterparts. 0.96854377 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:38:43Z GO: TRAP–RNA 0.9839508 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:21:04Z DUMMY: D loss metric 0.98396283 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:27:21Z MESH: SRD 0.9861578 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:07Z SO: Glu 0.98857224 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:18Z SO: Asp evidence DUMMY: melaniev@ebi.ac.uk 2023-07-06T15:26:33Z difference map 0.91976935 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:53Z GO: TRAP 0.9860378 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:35Z SO: Trp 0.99085087 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:39Z SO: Cys 0.9699916 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:14:14Z CHEBI: Trp 0.9950683 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:21:30Z DUMMY: Fourier difference peaks 0.97884846 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:43Z SO: Gly 0.9714825 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss 0.99046993 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:21:33Z DUMMY: electron density 0.98477256 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:11Z SO: Glu 0.98784196 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:19Z SO: Asp 0.7084436 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z D loss 0.9841786 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:17Z SO: Glu 0.9849412 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:19Z SO: Asp 0.993453 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:14:18Z CHEBI: CO2 0.9969453 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:31:56Z DUMMY: oxidized 0.98660594 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:19Z SO: Glu 0.98063844 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:19Z SO: Asp RESULTS title_2 21189 RNA is less susceptible to electron-density loss than protein within the TRAP–RNA complex   0.99770075 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.83079296 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:12Z DUMMY: electron-density 0.9937124 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:38:43Z GO: TRAP–RNA RESULTS paragraph 21285 Visual inspection of Fourier difference maps illustrated the clear lack of RNA electron-density degradation with increasing dose compared with the obvious protein damage manifestations (Figs. 3 ▸ b and 3 ▸ c). Only at the highest doses investigated (>20 MGy) was density loss observed at the RNA phosphate and C—O bonds of the phosphodiester backbone. However, the median D loss was lower by a factor of >2 for RNA P atoms than for Glu and Asp side-chain groups at 25.0 MGy (Supplementary Fig. S4), and furthermore could not be numerically distinguished from Gly Cα atoms within TRAP, which are not radiation-sensitive at the doses tested here (Supplementary Fig. S3). 0.9262293 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:16:54Z MESH: Visual inspection of 0.9843981 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:15Z DUMMY: Fourier difference maps 0.99798906 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.8665679 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:17Z DUMMY: electron-density degradation 0.9983839 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.88909703 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss 0.9981768 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9861231 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:24Z SO: Glu 0.9858482 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:19Z SO: Asp 0.9861166 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:44Z SO: Gly 0.97520036 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP RESULTS title_2 21965 RNA binding protects radiation-sensitive residues   chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z RNA RESULTS paragraph 22019 For the large number of acidic residues per TRAP ring (four Asp and six Glu residues per protein monomer), a strong dependence of decarboxylation susceptibility on local environment was observed (Fig. 4 ▸). For each Glu Cδ or Asp Cγ atom, D loss provided a direct measure of the rate of side-chain carboxyl-group disordering and subsequent decarboxylation. For acidic residues with no differing interactions between nonbound and bound TRAP (Fig. 4 ▸ a), similar damage was apparent between the two rings within the asymmetric unit, as expected. However, TRAP residues directly on the RNA-binding interfaces exhibited greater damage accumulation in nonbound TRAP (Fig. 4 ▸ b), and for residues at the ring–ring interfaces (where crystal contacts were detected) bound TRAP exhibited enhanced SRD accumulation (Fig. 4 ▸ c). 0.9912158 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:58:12Z ring 0.989652 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:19Z SO: Asp 0.98959446 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:34:05Z SO: Glu 0.9787446 oligomeric_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:50Z DUMMY: monomer 0.9698287 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:34:09Z SO: Glu 0.95125747 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:19Z SO: Asp evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z D loss 0.9959565 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:09Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.9911316 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:39Z DUMMY: bound 0.99624735 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.8192733 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.99758184 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:27Z SO: RNA-binding interfaces 0.9959115 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.99391973 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.9969743 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:29Z SO: ring–ring interfaces 0.9965004 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:39Z DUMMY: bound 0.9917121 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP RESULTS paragraph 22856 Three acidic residues (Glu36, Asp39 and Glu42) are involved in RNA interactions within each of the 11 TRAP ring subunits, and Fig. 5 ▸ shows their density changes with increasing dose. Hotelling’s T-squared test (the multivariate counterpart of Student’s t-test) was used to reject the null hypothesis that the means of the D loss metric were equal for the bound and nonbound groups in Fig. 5 ▸. 0.99910825 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:41Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.99910176 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:46Z DUMMY: Asp39 0.99909663 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:50Z DUMMY: Glu42 0.9915868 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.7789828 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.4135374 structure_element cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:58:12Z SO: ring structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:15:54Z subunits 0.9754962 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:21:41Z DUMMY: density changes 0.9385281 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:16Z MESH: Hotelling’s T-squared test experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:17:44Z Student’s t-test 0.9535044 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:21:49Z DUMMY: D loss metric 0.99416935 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:39Z DUMMY: bound 0.98500234 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound RESULTS paragraph 23260 A significant reduction in D loss is seen for Glu36 in RNA-bound compared with nonbound TRAP, indicative of a lower rate of side-chain decarboxylation (Fig. 5 ▸ a; p = 6.06 × 10−5). For each TRAP ring subunit, the Glu36 side-chain carboxyl group accepts a pair of hydrogen bonds from the two N atoms of the G3 RNA base. In our analysis, Asp39 in the TRAP–(GAGUU)10GAG structure appears to exhibit two distinct hydrogen bonds to the G1 base within each of the 11 TRAP–RNA interfaces, as does Glu36 to G3; however, the reduction in density disordering upon RNA binding is far less significant for Asp39 than for Glu36 (Fig. 5 ▸ b, p = 0.0925). 0.95402676 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss 0.9990717 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.99607676 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:32:01Z DUMMY: RNA-bound 0.9939761 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.94174945 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z TRAP structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:58:12Z ring structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:15:42Z subunit 0.9990544 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.98224247 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:11Z DUMMY: G3 0.996082 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.99904436 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:46Z DUMMY: Asp39 complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:00:19Z TRAP–(GAGUU)10GAG 0.9971259 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:21:52Z DUMMY: structure 0.43124557 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:24Z DUMMY: G1 site SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:45:21Z TRAP–RNA interfaces 0.99898416 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.5508266 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:11Z DUMMY: G3 0.8253004 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:21:57Z DUMMY: density 0.59934 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9990036 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:46Z DUMMY: Asp39 0.99900705 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 RESULTS title_2 23913 RNA binding reduces radiation-induced disorder on the atomic scale   chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z RNA RESULTS paragraph 23984 One oxygen (O∊1) of Glu42 appears to form a hydrogen bond to a nearby water within each TRAP RNA-binding pocket, with the other (O∊2) being involved in a salt-bridge interaction with Arg58 (Hopcroft et al., 2002; Antson et al., 1999). Salt-bridge interactions have previously been suggested to reduce the glutamate decarboxylation rate within the large (∼62.4 kDa) myrosinase protein structure (Burmeister, 2000). A significant difference was observed between the D loss dynamics for the nonbound/bound Glu42 O∊1 atoms (Fig. 5 ▸ c; p = 0.007) but not for the Glu42 O∊2 atoms (Fig. 5 ▸ d; p = 0.239), indicating that the stabilizing strength of this salt-bridge interaction was conserved upon RNA binding and that the water-mediated hydrogen bond had a greater relative susceptibility to atomic disordering in the absence of RNA. The density-change dynamics were statistically indistinguishable between bound and nonbound TRAP for each Glu42 carboxyl group Cδ atom (p = 0.435), indicating that upon RNA binding the conserved salt-bridge interaction ultimately dictated the overall Glu42 decarboxylation rate. 0.9987974 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:50Z DUMMY: Glu42 0.9982838 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:14:22Z CHEBI: water site SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:45:45Z TRAP RNA-binding pocket 0.99884206 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:45:53Z DUMMY: Arg58 0.99792117 residue_name melaniev@ebi.ac.uk 2023-07-06T15:26:50Z SO: glutamate 0.99548495 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:27:28Z MESH: myrosinase 0.996011 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:22:00Z DUMMY: structure 0.98592824 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:22:03Z DUMMY: D loss dynamics 0.995103 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.98567003 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:39Z DUMMY: bound 0.9971819 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:50Z DUMMY: Glu42 0.99736005 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:50Z DUMMY: Glu42 chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z RNA 0.6723021 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:14:46Z CHEBI: water 0.99513197 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:32:17Z DUMMY: absence of 0.97005063 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.99278337 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:22:06Z DUMMY: density-change dynamics 0.99656266 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:39Z DUMMY: bound 0.9923832 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.23798376 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.99764353 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:50Z DUMMY: Glu42 0.4976674 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9930019 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:50Z DUMMY: Glu42 RESULTS paragraph 25115 The RNA-stabilizing effect was not restricted to radiation-sensitive acidic residues. The side chain of Phe32 stacks against the G3 base within the 11 TRAP RNA-binding interfaces (Antson et al., 1999). With increasing dose, the D loss associated with the Phe32 side chain was significantly reduced upon RNA binding (Fig. 5 ▸ e; Phe32 Cζ; p = 0.0014), an indication that radiation-induced conformation disordering of Phe32 had been reduced. The extended aliphatic Lys37 side chain stacks against the nearby G1 base, making a series of nonpolar contacts within each RNA-binding interface. The D loss for Lys37 side-chain atoms was also reduced when stacked against the G1 base (Fig. 5 ▸ f; p = 0.0243 for Lys37 C∊ atoms). Representative Phe32 and Lys37 atoms were selected to illustrate these trends. chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z RNA 0.99905163 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:36Z DUMMY: Phe32 0.9022129 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:10Z DUMMY: G3 site SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:46:58Z TRAP RNA-binding interfaces 0.9752722 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss 0.999049 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:36Z DUMMY: Phe32 chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z RNA 0.99901557 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:36Z DUMMY: Phe32 0.99905235 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:36Z DUMMY: Phe32 0.99905616 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:41Z DUMMY: Lys37 0.54564714 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:23Z DUMMY: G1 0.99768096 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:04:01Z SO: RNA-binding interface 0.9751469 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss 0.99891317 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:42Z DUMMY: Lys37 0.7176499 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:24Z DUMMY: G1 0.9988103 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:42Z DUMMY: Lys37 0.99893457 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:36Z DUMMY: Phe32 0.9989254 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:42Z DUMMY: Lys37 DISCUSS title_1 25925 Discussion   DISCUSS paragraph 25940 Here, MX radiation-induced specific structural changes within the large TRAP–RNA assembly over a large dose range (1.3–25.0 MGy) have been analysed using a high-throughput quantitative approach, providing a measure of the electron-density distribution for each refined atom with increasing dose, D loss. Compared with previous studies, the results provide a further step in the detailed characterization of SRD effects in MX. Our method­ology, which eliminated tedious and error-prone visual inspection, permitted the determination on a per-atom basis of the most damaged sites, as characterized by F obs(d n) − F obs(d 1) Fourier difference map peaks between successive data sets collected from the same crystal. Here, it provided the precision required to quantify the role of RNA in the damage susceptibilities of equivalent atoms between RNA-bound and nonbound TRAP, but it is applicable to any MX SRD study. experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:30Z MX 0.9915398 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:38:43Z GO: TRAP–RNA 0.9947875 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:22:11Z DUMMY: electron-density distribution 0.78213966 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss 0.64419585 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:30Z MESH: MX evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:54:22Z F obs(d n) − F obs(d 1) Fourier difference map peaks 0.98756266 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:22:22Z DUMMY: crystal 0.9878491 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:21Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9950579 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:32:29Z DUMMY: RNA-bound 0.9650826 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.45595852 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:30Z MX DISCUSS paragraph 26862 The RNA was found to be substantially more radiation-resistant than the protein, even at the highest doses investigated (∼25.0 MGy), which is in strong concurrence with our previous SRD investigation of the C.Esp1396I protein–DNA complex (Bury et al., 2015). Consistent with that study, at high doses of above ∼20 MGy, F obs(d n) − F obs(d 1) map density was detected around P, O3′ and O5′ atoms of the RNA backbone, with no significant difference density localized to RNA ribose and basic subunits. RNA backbone disordering thus appears to be the main radiation-induced effect in RNA, with the protein–base interactions maintained even at high doses (>20 MGy). The U4 phosphate exhibited marginally larger D loss values above 20 MGy than G1, A2 and G3 (Supplementary Fig. S4). Since U4 is the only refined nucleotide not to exhibit significant base–protein interactions around TRAP (with a water-mediated hydrogen bond detected in only three of the 11 subunits and a single Arg58 hydrogen bond suggested in a further four subunits), this increased U4 D loss can be explained owing to its greater flexibility. At 25.0 MGy, the magnitude of the RNA backbone D loss was of the same order as for the radiation-insensitive Gly Cα atoms and on average less than half that of the acidic residues of the protein (Supplementary Fig. S3). Consequently, no clear single-strand breaks could be located, and since RNA-binding within the current TRAP–(GAGUU)10GAG complex is mediated predominantly through base–protein interactions, the biological integrity of the RNA complex was dictated by the rate at which protein decarboxylation occurred. 0.97414523 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.7477479 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:32:46Z DUMMY: radiation-resistant experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:17:38Z SRD investigation 0.99410534 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:31:03Z GO: C.Esp1396I chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z DNA evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:54:03Z F obs(d n) − F obs(d 1) map density 0.9961176 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9903002 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:22:26Z DUMMY: difference density 0.99770594 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:15:54Z subunits 0.9490286 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.98482555 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.6900701 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:53:16Z DUMMY: U4 0.5953651 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:14:51Z CHEBI: phosphate 0.9657221 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss 0.48627108 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:24Z DUMMY: G1 0.43101338 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:54:30Z DUMMY: A2 0.69601625 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:11Z DUMMY: G3 0.97514343 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:53:17Z DUMMY: U4 0.8990134 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.9884177 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:15:01Z CHEBI: water structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:15:54Z subunits 0.99823785 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:45:53Z DUMMY: Arg58 structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:15:54Z subunits 0.9919527 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:53:17Z DUMMY: U4 0.7579533 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z RNA 0.66986865 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss 0.9113056 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:44Z SO: Gly chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z RNA complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:53:41Z TRAP–(GAGUU)10GAG 0.86929446 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA DISCUSS paragraph 28527 RNA interacting with TRAP was shown to offer significant protection against radiation-induced structural changes. Both Glu36 and Asp39 bind directly to RNA, each through two hydrogen bonds to guanine bases (G3 and G1, respectively). However, compared with Asp39, Glu36 is strikingly less decarboxylated when bound to RNA (Fig. 4 ▸). This is in good agreement with previous mutagenesis and nucleoside analogue studies (Elliott et al., 2001), which indicated that the G1 nucleotide does not bind to TRAP as strongly as do A2 and G3, and plays little role in the high RNA-binding affinity of TRAP (K d ≃ 1.1 ± 0.4 nM). For Glu36 and Asp39, no direct quantitative correlation could be established between hydrogen-bond length and D loss (linear R 2 of <0.23 for all doses; Supplementary Fig. S5). Thus, another factor must be responsible for this clear reduction in Glu36 CO2 decarboxyl­ation in RNA-bound TRAP. The Glu36 carboxyl side chain also potentially forms hydrogen bonds to His34 and Lys56, but since these interactions are conserved irrespective of G3 nucleotide binding, this cannot directly account for the stabilization effect on Glu36 in RNA-bound TRAP. Radiation-induced decarboxylation has been proposed to be mediated by preferential positive-hole migration to the side-chain carboxyl group, with rapid proton transfer trapping the hole at the carboxyl group (Burmeister, 2000; Symons, 1997):where the forward rate is K 1 and the backward rate is K −1, where the forward rate is K 2. 0.99296665 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.98447126 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.9987546 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.99878544 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:46Z DUMMY: Asp39 0.99426657 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.97147286 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:15:09Z CHEBI: guanine 0.92182314 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:11Z DUMMY: G3 0.95111024 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:24Z DUMMY: G1 0.998728 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:46Z DUMMY: Asp39 0.99873954 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.9912282 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:32:51Z DUMMY: bound to 0.9868809 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:18:19Z mutagenesis and nucleoside analogue studies 0.7989518 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:24Z DUMMY: G1 0.98919463 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.78089446 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:54:30Z DUMMY: A2 0.8507618 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:11Z DUMMY: G3 0.98744667 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:22:33Z DUMMY: RNA-binding affinity 0.99020547 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.99115556 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:22:36Z DUMMY: K d 0.99872905 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.998755 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:46Z DUMMY: Asp39 evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z D loss evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:23:06Z linear R 2 0.9987036 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.9961844 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:32:54Z DUMMY: RNA-bound 0.9805304 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.9988978 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.9990214 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:55:21Z DUMMY: His34 0.99905556 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:55:26Z DUMMY: Lys56 0.95854217 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:32:59Z DUMMY: conserved 0.996298 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:11Z DUMMY: G3 0.9989222 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.9960868 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:33:02Z DUMMY: RNA-bound 0.9864499 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP DISCUSS paragraph 30034 When bound to RNA, the average solvent-accessible area of the Glu36 side-chain O atoms is reduced from ∼15 to 0 Å2. We propose that with no solvent accessibility Glu36 decarboxylation is inhibited, since the CO2-formation rate K 2 is greatly reduced, and suggest that steric hindrance prevents each radicalized Glu36 CO2 group from achieving the planar conformation required for complete dissociation from TRAP. The electron-recombination rate K −1 remains high, however, owing to rapid electron migration through the protein–RNA complex to refill the Glu36 positive hole (the precursor for Glu decarboxylation). Upon RNA binding, the Asp39 side-chain carboxyl group solvent-accessible area changes from ∼75 to 35 Å2, still allowing a high CO2-formation rate K 2. 0.9948141 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:33:06Z DUMMY: bound to 0.99623907 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.99894124 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.9985372 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.76363486 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:23:16Z DUMMY: CO2-formation rate K 2 0.9988926 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z TRAP evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:23:39Z electron-recombination rate K −1 complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:04:50Z protein–RNA 0.99887615 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.97079873 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:34:26Z SO: positive hole 0.8287284 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:34:16Z SO: Glu 0.9915752 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.998931 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:46Z DUMMY: Asp39 chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:23:52Z CO2 0.59207654 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:23:58Z DUMMY: rate K 2 DISCUSS paragraph 30812 Previous studies have reported inconsistent results concerning the dependence of the acidic residue decarboxylation rate on solvent accessibility (Weik et al., 2000; Fioravanti et al., 2007; Gerstel et al., 2015). The prevalence of radical attack from solvent channels surrounding the protein in the crystal is a questionable cause, considering previous observations indicating that the strongly oxidizing hydroxyl radical is immobile at 100 K (Allan et al., 2013; Owen et al., 2012). Furthermore, the suggested electron hole-trapping mechanism which induces decarboxylation within proteins at 100 K has no clear mechanistic dependence on the solvent-accessible area of each carboxyl group. By comparing equivalent acidic residues with and without RNA, we have now deconvoluted the role of solvent accessibility from other local protein environment factors, and thus propose a suitable mechanism by which exceptionally low solvent accessibility can reduce the rate of decarboxylation. Overall, no direct correlation between solvent accessibility and decarboxylation susceptibility was observed, but it is very clear that inaccessible residues are protected. 0.99064636 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:24:02Z DUMMY: crystal 0.86443084 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:33:09Z DUMMY: with 0.7418846 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:33:11Z DUMMY: without 0.9973688 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA DISCUSS paragraph 31974 Apart from these RNA-binding interfaces, RNA binding was seen to enhance decarboxylation for residues Glu50, Glu71 and Glu73, all of which are involved in crystal contacts between TRAP rings (Fig. 4 ▸ c). However, for each of these residues the exact crystal contacts are not preserved between bound and nonbound TRAP or even between monomers within one TRAP ring. For example, in bound TRAP, Glu73 hydrogen-bonds to a nearby lysine on each of the 11 subunits, whereas in nonbound TRAP no such interaction exists and Glu73 interacts with a variable number of refined waters in each subunit. Thus, the dependence of decarboxylation rates on these interactions could not be established. 0.99785984 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:34:37Z SO: RNA-binding interfaces chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z RNA 0.999079 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:56:05Z DUMMY: Glu50 0.99905926 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:56:10Z DUMMY: Glu71 0.9990657 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:56:14Z DUMMY: Glu73 complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z TRAP structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:05:25Z rings 0.9930227 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:39Z DUMMY: bound 0.9660058 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.9864768 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z TRAP structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:58:12Z ring 0.9962069 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:39Z DUMMY: bound 0.9905319 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.9990728 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:56:14Z DUMMY: Glu73 0.99010086 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:56:37Z SO: lysine structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:15:54Z subunits 0.9937517 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.9874014 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:58Z GO: TRAP 0.999064 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:56:14Z DUMMY: Glu73 0.9762691 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:15:18Z CHEBI: waters structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:15:42Z subunit DISCUSS paragraph 32661 Radiation-induced side-chain conformational changes have been poorly characterized in previous SRD investigations owing to their strong dependence on packing density and geometric strain. Such structural changes are known to have significant roles within enzymatic pathways, and experimenters must be aware of these possible confounding factors when assigning true functional mechanisms using MX. Our results show that RNA binding to TRAP physically stabilizes non-acidic residues within the TRAP macromolecule, most notably Lys37 and Phe32, which stack against the G1 and G3 bases, respectively. It has been suggested (Burmeister, 2000) that Tyr residues can lose their aromatic –OH group owing to radiation-induced effects; however, no energetically favourable pathway for –OH cleavage exists and this has not been detected in aqueous radiation-chemistry studies. In TRAP, D loss increased at a similar rate for both the Tyr O atoms and aromatic ring atoms, suggesting that full ring conformational disordering is more likely. Indeed, no convincing reproducible Fourier difference peaks above the background map noise were observed around any Tyr terminal –OH groups. experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:18:42Z SRD investigations 0.74215937 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:30Z MESH: MX 0.95398015 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9726016 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:59Z GO: TRAP 0.8587137 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:59Z GO: TRAP 0.9990075 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:42Z DUMMY: Lys37 0.99903595 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:36Z DUMMY: Phe32 0.65299237 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:24Z DUMMY: G1 0.5014381 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:11Z DUMMY: G3 0.98193204 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:56:31Z SO: Tyr 0.9829249 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:59Z GO: TRAP 0.6355414 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:57Z DUMMY: D loss 0.97448653 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:56:34Z SO: Tyr structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:58:12Z ring structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:58:12Z ring 0.9927671 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:24:08Z DUMMY: Fourier difference peaks 0.56909597 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:24:17Z DUMMY: map 0.9574091 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:56:40Z SO: Tyr DISCUSS paragraph 33837 The RNA-stabilization effects on protein are observed at short ranges and are restricted to within the RNA-binding interfaces around the TRAP ring. For example, Asp17 is located ∼6.8 Å from the G1 base, outside the RNA-binding interfaces, and has indistinguishable Cγ atom D loss dose-dynamics between RNA-bound and nonbound TRAP (p > 0.9). An increase in the dose at which functionally important residues remain intact has biological ramifications for understanding the mechanisms at which ionizing radiation damage is mitigated within naturally forming DNA–protein and RNA–protein complexes. Observations of lower protein radiation-sensitivity in DNA-bound forms have been recorded in solution at RT at much lower doses (∼1 kGy) than those used for typical MX experiments [e.g. an oestrogen response element–receptor complex (Stísová et al., 2006) and a DNA glycosylase and its abasic DNA target site (Gillard et al., 2004)]. In these studies, the main damaging species is predicted to be the oxidizing hydroxyl radical produced through solvent irradiation, which is known to add to double covalent bonds within both DNA and RNA bases to induce strand breaks and base modification (Spotheim-Maurizot & Davídková, 2011; Chance et al., 1997). It was suggested that physical screening of DNA by protein shielded the DNA–protein interaction sites from radical damage, yielding an extended life-dose for the nucleoprotein complex compared with separate protein and DNA constituents at RT. chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z RNA 0.99812096 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:34:42Z SO: RNA-binding interfaces complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:59Z TRAP structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:58:12Z ring 0.9991387 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:00:25Z DUMMY: Asp17 0.48927557 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:52:24Z DUMMY: G1 0.9979715 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:34:45Z SO: RNA-binding interfaces 0.9856348 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:24:21Z DUMMY: loss dose-dynamics 0.99598575 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:33:16Z DUMMY: RNA-bound 0.9913564 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.9880157 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:59Z GO: TRAP complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:06:23Z DNA–protein complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:06:42Z RNA–protein 0.99518895 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:33:22Z DUMMY: DNA-bound experimental_method MESH: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:30Z MX 0.9768747 protein_type cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:27:33Z MESH: DNA glycosylase 0.992797 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:35:08Z SO: abasic DNA target site 0.98401004 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z CHEBI: DNA 0.98465955 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z DNA 0.99563825 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:35:12Z SO: DNA–protein interaction sites chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z DNA DISCUSS paragraph 35345 However, in the current MX study at 100 K, the main damaging species are believed to be migrating LEEs and holes produced directly within the protein–RNA components or in closely associated solvent. The results presented here suggest that biologically relevant nucleoprotein complexes also exhibit prolonged life-doses under the effect of LEE-induced structural changes, involving direct physical protection of key RNA-binding residues. Such reduced radiation-sensitivity in this case ensures that the interacting protein remains bound long enough to the RNA to complete its function, even whilst exposed to ionizing radiation. Within the nonbound TRAP macromolecule, the acidic residues within the unoccupied RNA-binding interfaces (Asp39, Glu36, Glu42) are notably amongst the most susceptible residues within the asymmetric unit (Fig. 4 ▸). When exposed to X-rays, these residues will be preferentially damaged by X-rays and subsequently reduce the affinity with which TRAP binds to RNA. Within the cellular environment, this mechanism could reduce the risk that radiation-damaged proteins might bind to RNA, thus avoiding the detrimental introduction of incorrect DNA-repair, transcriptional and base-modification pathways. 0.62370133 experimental_method cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:28:30Z MESH: MX complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:04:56Z protein–RNA 0.53609496 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:13:58Z GO: nucleoprotein 0.9972315 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:34:49Z SO: RNA-binding residues protein_state DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:39Z bound 0.9973586 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.98719054 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.6919731 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:59Z GO: TRAP 0.9982071 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:34:52Z SO: RNA-binding interfaces 0.9990889 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:46Z DUMMY: Asp39 0.99907863 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.9990723 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:50Z DUMMY: Glu42 0.87554866 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:59Z GO: TRAP 0.99667054 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9962542 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA chemical CHEBI: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:36:34Z DNA DISCUSS paragraph 36579 The Python scripts written to calculate the per atom D loss metric are available from the authors on request. 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D. et al. (2011). Acta Cryst. D67, 235–242. REF ref 41049 Yano, J., Kern, J., Irrgang, K. D., Latimer, M. J., Bergmann, U., Glatzel, P., Pushkar, Y., Biesiadka, J., Loll, B., Sauer, K., Messinger, J., Zouni, A. & Yachandra, V. K. (2005). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 102, 12047–12052. REF ref 41276 Zeldin, O. B., Brockhauser, S., Bremridge, J., Holton, J. M. & Garman, E. F. (2013). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 110, 20551–20556. REF ref 41408 Zeldin, O. B., Gerstel, M. & Garman, E. F. (2013). J. Appl. Cryst. 46, 1225–1230. d-72-00648-fig1.jpg fig1 FIG fig_caption 41492 The TRAP–(GAGUU)10GAG complex asymmetric unit (PDB entry 1gtf; Hopcroft et al., 2002). Bound tryptophan ligands are represented as coloured spheres. RNA is shown is yellow. complex_assembly GO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:58:32Z TRAP–(GAGUU)10GAG 0.99105424 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:39Z DUMMY: Bound 0.9840899 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:16:01Z CHEBI: tryptophan 0.9981456 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA d-72-00648-fig2.jpg fig2 FIG fig_caption 41667 (a) Electron-density loss sites as indicated by D loss in the TRAP–RNA complex crystal by residue/nucleotide type for five doses [sites determined above the 4× average D loss threshold, calculated over the TRAP–RNA structure for the first difference map: F obs(d 2) − F obs(d 1)]. Cumulative frequencies are normalized to both the total number of non-H atoms per residue/nucleotide and the total number of that residue/nucleotide type present. (b) Average D loss for each residue/nucleotide type with respect to the DWD (diffraction-weighted dose; Zeldin, Brock­hauser et al., 2013). 95% confidence intervals (CI) are shown. Only a subset of key TRAP residue types are included. The average D loss (calculated over the whole TRAP asymmetric unit) is shown at each dose (dashed line). evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:12:10Z D loss 0.9932771 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:38:44Z GO: TRAP–RNA 0.9954058 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:24:38Z DUMMY: crystal 0.7991534 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:24:42Z DUMMY: D loss threshold 0.99266356 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:38:44Z GO: TRAP–RNA 0.98201466 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:24:45Z DUMMY: structure 0.9719779 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:24:49Z DUMMY: difference map evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:25:15Z F obs(d 2) − F obs(d 1) evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:13:13Z Average D loss 0.96845776 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:25:20Z DUMMY: DWD 0.98903877 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:25:23Z DUMMY: diffraction-weighted dose 0.5221266 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:59Z GO: TRAP evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:25:43Z average D loss 0.7290474 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:59Z GO: TRAP d-72-00648-fig3.jpg fig3 FIG fig_caption 42459 F obs(d n) − F obs(d 1) Fourier difference maps for (a) n = 2 (3.9 MGy), (b) n = 3 (6.5 MGy) and (c) n = 7 (16.7 MGy) contoured at ±4σ (a) and ±3.5σ (b, c). In (a) clear difference density is observed around the Glu42 carboxyl side chain in chain H, within the lowest dose difference map at d 2 = 3.9 MGy. Radiation-induced protein disordering is evident across the large dose range (b, c); in comparison, no clear deterioration of the RNA density was observed. evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:26:14Z F obs(d n) − F obs(d 1) Fourier difference maps 0.9945644 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:26:18Z DUMMY: difference density 0.9991478 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:51Z DUMMY: Glu42 0.8718893 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:26:29Z DUMMY: lowest dose difference map 0.997905 chemical cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:26:22Z CHEBI: RNA 0.9303295 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:26:36Z DUMMY: density d-72-00648-fig4.jpg fig4 FIG fig_caption 42938 D loss calculated for all side-chain carboxyl group Glu Cδ and Asp Cγ atoms within the TRAP–RNA complex for a dose of 19.3 MGy (d 8). Residues have been grouped by amino-acid number, and split into bound and nonbound groupings, with each bar representing the mean calculated over 11 equivalent atoms around a TRAP ring. Whiskers indicate 95% CI. The D loss behaviour shown here was consistently exhibited across the entire investigated dose range. 0.89408696 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:26:41Z DUMMY: D loss 0.9847978 residue_name melaniev@ebi.ac.uk 2023-07-06T15:26:50Z SO: Glu 0.97973424 residue_name cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:42:19Z SO: Asp 0.9919364 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:38:44Z GO: TRAP–RNA 0.98781407 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:40Z DUMMY: bound 0.94484127 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.72071564 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:59Z GO: TRAP structure_element SO: cleaner0 2023-07-05T11:58:12Z ring 0.93198663 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:26:44Z DUMMY: D loss d-72-00648-fig5.jpg fig5 FIG fig_caption 43397 D loss against dose for (a) Glu36 Cδ, (b) Asp39 Cγ, (c) Glu42 O∊1, (d) Glu42 O∊2, (e) Phe32 Cζ and (f) Lys37 C∊ atoms. 95% CI are included for each set of 11 equivalent atoms grouped as bound/nonbound. RNA-binding interface interactions are shown for TRAP chain N, with the F obs(d 7) − F obs(d 1) Fourier difference map (dose 16.7 MGy) overlaid and contoured at a ±4σ level. 0.7863771 evidence cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:26:53Z DUMMY: D loss 0.99909854 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:42Z DUMMY: Glu36 0.9990896 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:46Z DUMMY: Asp39 0.9990759 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:51Z DUMMY: Glu42 0.9990729 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:51Z DUMMY: Glu42 0.9990627 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:36Z DUMMY: Phe32 0.9990792 residue_name_number cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:51:42Z DUMMY: Lys37 0.9931265 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:43:40Z DUMMY: bound 0.9739872 protein_state cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:44:10Z DUMMY: nonbound 0.9972383 site cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:34:57Z SO: RNA-binding interface 0.95457613 complex_assembly cleaner0 2023-07-05T12:07:59Z GO: TRAP evidence DUMMY: cleaner0 2023-07-05T10:59:56Z F obs(d 7) − F obs(d 1) Fourier difference map