Volume 64, Issue 1 pp. 33-35
Free Access

Report on a project on three-dimensional imaging of the biological cell by single-particle X-ray diffraction

D. Sayre

D. Sayre

Department of Physics and Astronomy, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794-3800, USA

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First published: 10 January 2008
Citations: 2
D. Sayre, e-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Single-particle X-ray diffraction is an extension of X-ray crystallography which allows the specimen to be any small solid-state bounded object; in Shapiro et al. [Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA (2005), 102, 15343–15346] and Thibault et al. [Acta Cryst. (2006), A62, 248–261], the reader can find descriptions of a recent StonyBrook/Berkeley/Cornell two-dimensional imaging of a yeast cell by this technique. Our present work is aimed at extending the technique to the three-dimensional imaging of a cell. However, the usual method of doing that, namely rotating the specimen into many orientations in the X-ray beam, has not as yet given sufficiently good three-dimensional diffraction data to allow the work to go forward, the largest problem being the difficulty of preventing unwanted levels of change in the specimen through the extended exposure to a hostile environment of X-rays and, in some cases, high vacuum and/or extreme cold. The present paper discusses possible methods of dealing with this problem.

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