Specific radiation damage frequently compromises structural analysis in macromolecular crystallography. However, it can also offer key mechanistic information. Here, we investigate the X-ray-induced radiolysis of the catalytic C5-peroxide adduct in crystals of the cofactor-independent enzyme urate oxidase. Using a top-hat X-ray beam to ensure homogeneous dose distribution, we monitored the occupancy of the peroxide species across extensive dose series at 100 K and room temperature (RT). We observe a fundamental kinetic phase transition between these thermal regimes. At RT, the peroxide decays rapidly following zero-order kinetics, consistent with a flux-limited regime where the radiolytically cleaved O2 product diffuses out of the active site to be replaced by water. Conversely, at 100 K the decay is markedly retarded and follows first-order kinetics. Bayesian kinetic modelling demonstrates that this cryoprotection arises from a recombination mechanism: the cleaved O2 molecule remains trapped in the active site with the organic species, enabling efficient recombination that competes with irreversible degradation, effectively resulting in radiation-induced in crystallo catalysis.
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Symeon M. Koulas
Soi Bui
Julius B. Kirkegaard
Acta Crystallographica Section D Structural Biology
King's College London
University of Padua
European Molecular Biology Laboratory
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Koulas et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2bcae4eeef8a2a6b0afb — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/s2059798326002688