Success Stories // 02.02.2017 // DECTRIS

Hitting new highs

Last year, the Protein Data Bank (PDB) released 10898 structures, a new record. Of these, 10012 were determined by X-ray crystallography. Structures of membrane proteins continue to account for a large number of high-profile publications (e.g. Mansoor et al., Zheng et al., Oswald et al., Celia et al., Morales-Perez et al.). Other highlights last year include Zika and CRISPR proteins (Barba-Spaeth et al., Lei et al., Dong et al., Yamano et al., Yang et al.). No fewer than eight high-profile publications investigate regulated proteolysis (Martinez-Zapien et al., Lechtenberg et al., Morgan et al., Cavadini et al., Petzold et al., Schrader et al., Trentini et al., Bhogaraju et al.), making it the hottest topic in structural biology. We would like to congratulate all involved researchers on these impressive achievements.

Figure 1. Percentage of X-ray structures in the PDB determined with data from DECTRIS detectors.

Structural biologists increasingly rely on DECTRIS products for their work. Last year, 30% of all released PDB entries were determined with PILATUS or EIGER data (Figure 1). You use our detectors because you will get data of the highest possible quality, which allows you to tackle the most challenging projects. High-profile publications are the deserved reward. In 2016, data from DECTRIS detectors contributed to 54% of Cell, Science and Nature papers that reported crystal structures.

In 2016, the first two fourth-generation synchrotrons [1], MAX IV in Lund, Sweden, and NSLS-II on Long Island, United States, reported first light. Many other synchrotrons prepare major upgrades that promise a dramatic change in how macromolecular crystallography is done. New detectors are an important part of all upgrade plans. EIGER has already arrived at MAX IV and NSLS-II and a number of other facilities (Table 1).

Table 1. EIGER detectors are installed at 14 macromolecular crystallography beamlines worldwide.
Synchrotron Beamline Detector
ASLS PX2 EIGER X 16M
APS GM/CA EIGER X 16M
APS LS-CAT EIGER X 9M
APS NE-CAT EIGER X 16M
ESRF MASSIF-3 EIGER X 4M
MAX IV BioMAX EIGER X 16M
NSLS-II AMX EIGER X 9M
NSLS-II FMX EIGER X 16M
Photon Factory BL-1A 2x EIGER X 4M
SLS X06SA EIGER X 16M
SOLEIL PROXIMA-2A EIGER X 9M
SPring-8 BL26B1 EIGER X 4M
SPring-8 BL32XU EIGER X 9M
SSRL 12-1 EIGER X 16M

Crystallographers who have worked with EIGER (e.g. Joshua Carter of Shamrock Structures and Dan Rosenbaum of the University of Texas Medical Center) have seen improvements in the signal-to-noise ratio of high-resolution reflections. These empirical observations hold up to scientific scrutiny. A paper published by Meitian Wang's group at the Swiss Light Source shows that EIGER measures data with even higher accuracy than PILATUS. This higher quality is already reflected in the PDB. EIGER data are associated with 0.3% of the structures released last year. At the same time, four of the 139 Cell, Science and Nature papers relying on MX data reported data collection with EIGER. At nearly 3% of the total, this is a tenfold overrepresentation.

These are exciting times to be a structural biologist. Cryo-electron microscopy and tomography and electron diffraction are increasingly powerful. Techniques like small-angle X-ray scattering and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy have been developed to give results of unprecedented detail. But it is X-ray crystallography that provides the highest-resolution information for the widest range of macromolecules. We are looking forward to reading how you capitalize on PILATUS and EIGER for more great structures in 2017.

[1] D. Castelvecchi. (2015). Next-generation X-ray source fires up. Nature 525: 15-6