Life Sciences
Probing Molecular Structures Using Neutrons to Answer Biological Questions
Giovanna Fragneto, Institut Laue-Langevin (ILL)
Neutrons offer a range of analytical techniques to study biological processes and neutron research is making strides in cellular biology, virology, nanoscience and medicine. Giovanna Fragneto, Senior Fellow in Soft Matter at ILL, Europe’s fl agship centre for neutron science, looks at the techniques behind some recent fi ndings.
Where X-rays fail to locate hydrogen atoms, neutrons provide the answers. Rather than being scattered by the electron clouds of an atom, neutrons are scattered by the atomic nuclei. Additionally, the scattering from hydrogen is of a similar magnitude to the other common elements found in biological macromolecules – such as carbon, nitrogen, oxygen and sulphur - allowing the positions of all the atoms to be determined.
The ability of neutrons to provide the positions of hydrogen atoms in biological molecules is elegantly illustrated in a recent study of how HIV-1 protease, an enzyme critical for viral replication, binds to amprenavir, a commonly used inhibitor.
Previous X-ray studies of the binding of amprenavir to HIV-1 protease have speculated that a large number of hydrogen bonds were important. However, neutron studies on the quasi-Laue neutron diffractometer (LADI-III) at ILL indicated that in fact there are only two strong hydrogen bonds that contribute signifi cantly to the binding between the enzyme and inhibitor.
Neutrons, subatomic particles found in the nuclei of atoms, have properties which provide biologists with unique analytical techniques. Neutrons beams fi red at biological materials act like waves and are scattered when they interact with the nuclei of atoms. Analysis of the scattering pattern allows the structure and composition of the material to be determined.
Neutron wavelengths range from fractions of nanometres to hundreds of nanometres - going from hot to thermal and cold to ultracold energies. Thermal and cold neutrons are most commonly used in biological studies as their wavelengths, approximately a thousand times shorter than that of visible light, makes them particularly suitable for the study of biological structures, from small molecules and monomers, such as lipids or peptides, to larger molecules including viruses and proteins. Being electrically neutral, neutrons are able to penetrate deep into materials and are non-destructive.
A number of neutron techniques are being deployed at Institut Laue-Langevin, a publically funded international research facility in Grenoble and one of the world’s most intense neutron sources. Neutrons are being used to study a range of biological structures and processes, from proteins critical to virus replication, to ribosome assembly and molecular drug delivery systems. A number of these techniques are explored here in more detail.
Neutron Crystallography – New Insights
in to Structure-Guided Drug Design Traditionally, X-ray crystallography has been used to determine the structures of biological macromolecules such as proteins. Rosalind Franklin’s infamous ‘photo 51’, an X-ray diffraction pattern, led to the discovery of the structure of DNA and has been described as the most important photos ever taken.
X-ray crystallography has had a huge impact over the last century. Nevertheless, a limitation of the technique is that hydrogen atoms are virtually invisible in electron density maps as hydrogen has only one electron and thus scatters X-rays very weakly. This has meant that scientists have been left to speculate on their positions in molecules, despite their importance in a vast array of biological processes such as enzyme-catalysed reactions and drug binding.
These results provide new information on the binding that can be used to improve the drug’s performance. For example, by modifying certain functional groups of the drug, stronger hydrogen bonds can be formed with the enzyme, improving its performance and potentially reducing dosages.
This unique sensitivity to hydrogen atoms using neutrons provides the pharma industry with a new and powerful tool for structure-guided drug design. Whilst the value of X-ray crystallography will continue for many years, combining the use of X-rays with neutrons increases the clarity of how drugs interact with their protein targets and will no doubt be used to improve the effi cacy of other pharmaceuticals in the future.
Neutron Refl ectometry – Probing Thin
Films in Physiological Environments Although neutron crystallography is complementary and in certain situations has clear advantages over X-ray crystallography, the technique still requires the molecule being studied to be dehydrated, kept in a crystallised rigid form and held at a low temperature.
However, neutrons can also be used to study biological molecules in fl uids with similar properties to cytoplasm or blood, allowing analysis in environments that mimic physiological conditions. The diffraction technique, known as neutron refl ectometry, is used to investigate the properties and behaviour of surfaces and thin fi lms.
A recent study using the FIGARO instrument at ILL looked at the binding of silica nanoparticles to human serum albumin, the most abundant protein in the blood. The study examined the protein corona hypothesis, which suggests that nanoparticles are able to cross cell membranes because they bind to and become encased by proteins and are thus disguised from membrane receptors. It was not clear if the corona structure was prevalent at surfaces or not so neutrons were used to analyse human serum albumin behaviour at the air/ fl uid interface to mimic hydrophobic surfaces that nanoparticles may encounter in the body.
The FIGARO instrument allowed the proteins and nanoparticles to be studied in a buffer solution which had a pH similar to that of blood plasma. Neutron refl ectometry determined how proteins transported the nanoparticles to the interface. A strong collimated neutron beam was fi red at the surface, and the angle and wavelength of the refl ected beam were measured. These data provided structural information about the different molecules at the surface of the fi lm and showed how protein molecules decorated the silica nanoparticles at the interface.
The equipment also allowed the protein:nanoparticle ratio at the surface to be measured with respect to various properties of the fl uid, allowing the study of the binding under a number of different conditions.
The FIGARO instrument is unique in that it can collect data from top and bottom surfaces of a sample during the same experiment in a time-of-fl ight mode suited to dynamic interaction studies, without disturbance of the sample. This technique is particularly useful when analysing the interaction of biological membranes with formulations which are sensitive to changes in orientation as a result of gravity effects from phase separation. An international team of scientists at ILL recently used this technique to investigate the binding of liquid crystalline reservoirs of phospholipids and biomedically-relevant macromolecules with a model cellular membrane.
Picture: Andrey Kovalevsky
It was shown that the ‘parcels’ packed full of functional molecules not only attached to model membranes of suffi cient negative charge, but the macromolecules also transferred across to the other side. Even so, this mechanism was active only when the membrane was located above the formulation. This level of structural information is unique to neutron refl ectometry and gave two key messages.
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