Direct phasing in femtosecond nanocrystallography. I. Diffraction characteristics

Acta Crystallogr A Found Adv. 2014 Mar;70(Pt 2):143-53. doi: 10.1107/S2053273313032038. Epub 2014 Jan 15.

Abstract

X-ray free-electron lasers solve a number of difficulties in protein crystallography by providing intense but ultra-short pulses of X-rays, allowing collection of useful diffraction data from nanocrystals. Whereas the diffraction from large crystals corresponds only to samples of the Fourier amplitude of the molecular transform at the Bragg peaks, diffraction from very small crystals allows measurement of the diffraction amplitudes between the Bragg samples. Although highly attenuated, these additional samples offer the possibility of iterative phase retrieval without the use of ancillary experimental data [Spence et al. (2011). Opt. Express, 19, 2866-2873]. This first of a series of two papers examines in detail the characteristics of diffraction patterns from collections of nanocrystals, estimation of the molecular transform and the noise characteristics of the measurements. The second paper [Chen et al. (2014). Acta Cryst. A70, 154-161] examines iterative phase-retrieval methods for reconstructing molecular structures in the presence of the variable noise levels in such data.

Keywords: X-ray free-electron lasers; direct phasing; femtosecond nanocrystallography; nanocrystals; shape transform.