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      Electron diffraction determines molecular absolute configuration in a pharmaceutical nanocrystal

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      Science
      American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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          Abstract

          Determination of the absolute configuration of organic molecules is essential in drug development and the subsequent approval process. We show that this determination is possible through electron diffraction using nanocrystalline material. Ab initio structure determination by electron diffraction has so far been limited to compounds that maintain their crystallinity after a dose of one electron per square angstrom or more. We present a complete structure analysis of a pharmaceutical cocrystal of sofosbuvir and l-proline, which is about one order of magnitude less stable. Data collection on multiple positions of a crystal and an advanced-intensity extraction procedure enabled us to solve the structure ab initio. We further show that dynamical diffraction effects are strong enough to permit unambiguous determination of the absolute structure of material composed of light scatterers.

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          Crystallographic Computing System JANA2006: General features

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            High-resolution structure determination by continuous rotation data collection in MicroED

            MicroED uses very small three-dimensional protein crystals and electron diffraction for structure determination. An improved data collection protocol for MicroED called “continuous rotation” is presented. Here microcrystals are continuously rotated during data collection yielding improved data, and allowing data processing with MOSFLM resulting in improved resolution for the model protein lysozyme. These improvements pave the way for the implementation and application of MicroED with wide applicability in structural biology.
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              The CryoEM Method MicroED as a Powerful Tool for Small Molecule Structure Determination

              In the many scientific endeavors that are driven by organic chemistry, unambiguous identification of small molecules is of paramount importance. Over the past 50 years, NMR and other powerful spectroscopic techniques have been developed to address this challenge. While almost all of these techniques rely on inference of connectivity, the unambiguous determination of a small molecule’s structure requires X-ray and/or neutron diffraction studies. In practice, however, X-ray crystallography is rarely applied in routine organic chemistry due to intrinsic limitations of both the analytes and the technique. Here we report the use of the electron cryo-microscopy (cryoEM) method microcrystal electron diffraction (MicroED) to provide routine and unambiguous structural determination of small organic molecules. From simple powders, with minimal sample preparation, we could collect high-quality MicroED data from nanocrystals (∼100 nm, ∼10–15 g) resulting in atomic resolution (<1 Å) crystal structures in minutes.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Science
                Science
                American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
                0036-8075
                1095-9203
                May 16 2019
                May 17 2019
                May 16 2019
                May 17 2019
                : 364
                : 6441
                : 667-669
                Article
                10.1126/science.aaw2560
                31097664
                8c45e18c-cc5e-4538-8d8a-c60ea1073c39
                © 2019

                http://www.sciencemag.org/about/science-licenses-journal-article-reuse

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