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Nucleic Acid Crystallography

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Cover of 'Nucleic Acid Crystallography'

Table of Contents

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    Book Overview
  2. Altmetric Badge
    Chapter 1 Perspectives and Pitfalls in Nucleic Acids Crystallography
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    Chapter 2 Nucleic Acid Crystallography
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    Chapter 3 Preparation and Crystallization of Riboswitches
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    Chapter 4 In Vitro/In Vivo Production of tRNA for X-Ray Studies
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    Chapter 5 Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis for Purification of Large Amounts of RNA
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    Chapter 6 Use of the U1A Protein to Facilitate Crystallization and Structure Determination of Large RNAs
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    Chapter 7 Nucleic Acid Crystallography
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    Chapter 8 Nucleic Acid Crystallography
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    Chapter 9 Isothermal Titration Calorimetry: Assisted Crystallization of RNA–Ligand Complexes
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    Chapter 10 Crystallographic Data and Model Quality
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    Chapter 11 Advanced Crystallographic Data Collection Protocols for Experimental Phasing
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    Chapter 12 Nucleic Acid Crystallography via Direct Selenium Derivatization: RNAs Modified with Se-Nucleobases
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    Chapter 13 Practical Radiation Damage-Induced Phasing
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    Chapter 14 Soaking Hexammine Cations into RNA Crystals to Obtain Derivatives for Phasing Diffraction Data
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    Chapter 15 Using Molecular Replacement Phasing to Study the Structure and Function of RNA
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    Chapter 16 Helical Symmetry of Nucleic Acids: Obstacle or Help in Structure Solution?
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    Chapter 17 RNA Structure Refinement Using the ERRASER-Phenix Pipeline
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    Chapter 18 Neutron Nucleic Acid Crystallography
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    Chapter 19 Reconstitution of Functionally Active Thermus thermophilus 30S Ribosomal Subunit from Ribosomal 16S RNA and Ribosomal Proteins.
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    Chapter 20 Crystallographic Studies of the Ribosomal A-Site Molecular Switches by Using Model RNA Oligomers.
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    Chapter 21 Structure of the HCV Internal Ribosome Entry Site Subdomain IIa RNA in Complex with a Viral Translation Inhibitor.
  23. Altmetric Badge
    Chapter 22 Nucleic Acid Crystallography
Attention for Chapter 16: Helical Symmetry of Nucleic Acids: Obstacle or Help in Structure Solution?
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Chapter title
Helical Symmetry of Nucleic Acids: Obstacle or Help in Structure Solution?
Chapter number 16
Book title
Nucleic Acid Crystallography
Published in
Methods in molecular biology, January 2016
DOI 10.1007/978-1-4939-2763-0_16
Pubmed ID
Book ISBNs
978-1-4939-2762-3, 978-1-4939-2763-0
Authors

Alexandre Urzhumtsev, Ludmila Urzhumtseva, Ulrich Baumann, Urzhumtsev, Alexandre, Urzhumtseva, Ludmila, Baumann, Ulrich

Abstract

Crystallographic molecular replacement method is the key tool to define an atomic structure of nucleic acids. Frequently nucleic acids are packed forming continuous helices in the crystal. This arrangement of individual molecules in "infinite" pseudo helical structures in crystal may be the reason why the molecular replacement fails to find a unique position of the search atomic model as the method requires. The Patterson function, calculated as a Fourier series with diffraction intensities, has auxiliary peaks for such a molecular packing. Those near the origin peak indicate the orientation of the helices. The coordinates of other peaks are related to the molecular position and the rotation angle between two such "infinite" helices. Thus, the peak analysis allows getting molecular position even without a search model. An intelligent selecting and averaging of the phase sets corresponding to multiple probable positions of the search model again result in a unique solution but in the form of a Fourier synthesis and not a model. This synthesis can be used then to build an atomic model as it is the case for usual phasing methods.

Mendeley readers

Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 6 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Unknown 6 100%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Unspecified 2 33%
Student > Ph. D. Student 1 17%
Professor 1 17%
Unknown 2 33%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Unspecified 2 33%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 1 17%
Unknown 3 50%