What is it about?
MASSIF-1 at the ESRF is the world's first beamline to fully automate X-ray crystallography data collection making multiple complex decisions while taking user requests into account. The algorithms have been improved to reduce errors and, crucially, collect the best possible data from even the most difficult samples. By automatically adjusting the X-ray beam diameter and collecting multi-position data sets we show, using GPCR crystals and large scale analysis of data gathered from samples on the beamline, that better data can be collected in a more reliable fashion without the need for human presence.
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Why is it important?
Modern structural biology requires researchers to use a wide variety of techniques, reducing the time needed to specialise. In the future, an increasing proportion of macromolecular crystallography will have to be 'out-sourced' to automated systems in order to allow challenging systems to be investigated. Here, we describe how the automatic sample location, characterisation and data collection algorithms have been improved to collect data from weakly diffracting samples.
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Multi-position data collection and dynamic beam sizing: recent improvements to the automatic data-collection algorithms on MASSIF-1, Acta Crystallographica Section D Structural Biology, April 2018, International Union of Crystallography,
DOI: 10.1107/s2059798318003728.
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Resources
MASSIF-1 : Rise of the robots transforms MX
Video describing the MASSIF-1 beamline at the ESRF
A comparative anatomy of protein crystals: lessons from the automatic processing of 56 000 samples
In the 70 year history of macromolecular crystallography (MX) there has never been a wide ranging study of the size and shape of protein crystals or how these properties are related to the data that are collected from them. This is a phenomenal gap in our understanding of the most used method for structure determination and reflects the difficulty in gathering such data. In this paper, we analyse the properties of over 56,000 samples sent to the ESRF beamline MASSIF-1 over the last 4 years. The beamline records volumetric data for each sample as well as the results of scanning, characterisation, indexing and data processing. This has allowed us to test experimentally many assumptions and theories that have been made in the field and make new observations.
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