Time-resolved macromolecular crystallography
暂无分享,去创建一个
Reaction mechanisms in chemistry and biochemistry involve structural change, not merely static structure (1). These structural changes can be very rapid, spanning the time range from femtoseconds to seconds and above. We have developed and applied timeresolved X-ray crystallography(2,3) to monitor directly the changes in electron density and hence in atomic location, as biological macromolecules respond to light.
[1] J. Hajdu,et al. Progress with Laue diffraction studies on protein and virus crystals. , 1990, Biochemistry.
[2] J. Helliwell,et al. The uses of synchrotron X-radiation in the crystallography of molecular biology. , 1983, Progress in biophysics and molecular biology.
[3] J. Amorós,et al. The Laue method , 1975 .