Result: Room-temperature X-ray fragment screening with serial crystallography

Title:
Room-temperature X-ray fragment screening with serial crystallography
Source:
Nature Communications 16(1), 9089 (2025). doi:10.1038/s41467-025-64918-6
Publisher Information:
Springer Nature
Publication Year:
2025
Collection:
DESY Publication Database (PUBDB)
Subject Geographic:
DE
Document Type:
Academic journal article in journal/newspaper
Language:
English
Relation:
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/issn/2041-1723
Rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Accession Number:
edsbas.C0D76AF0
Database:
BASE

Further Information

Structural insights into protein-ligand interactions are essential for advancing drug development, with macromolecular X-ray crystallography being a cornerstone technique. Commonly X-ray data collection is conducted at cryogenic temperatures to mitigate radiation damage effects. However, this can introduce artifacts not only in the protein conformation but also in protein-ligand interactions. Recent studies highlight the advantages of room-temperature (RT) crystallography in capturing relevant states much closer to physiological temperatures. We have advanced fixed-target serial crystallography to enable high-throughput fragment screening at RT. Here we systematically compare RT fragment screening with conventional single crystal data collection at cryogenic temperature (cryo) of the Fosfomycin-resistance protein A from Klebsiella pneumoniae (FosAKP), an enzyme involved in antibiotic resistance. With RT serial crystallography we achieve resolutions comparable to cryogenic methods and identify a previously unobserved conformational state of the active site, offering additional starting points for drug design. For ligands identified in both screens, temperature did not have an influence on the binding mode of the ligand. But overall, we observed more binders at cryo, both at physiologically relevant and non-relevant sites. With the potential for further automation, RT screening with serial crystallography can advance drug development pipelines by making new conformations of proteins accessible.