Hi vito,

I don't think you need double labelling. Two (if there is a Met at the N-term 
it might be less ordered) or three SeMet should suffice to phase 360 residues. 
It was true in the old days that a Se could phase less than a hundred residues, 
but if your measurement is good (resolution better than 3A, 360° rotation 
range, fine slicing, PAD, little radiation damage, stable beamline) then I see 
no reason why SeMet-SAD (or even better MAD) shouldn't work.

One should mine the literature to find how many residues can be phased with one 
SeMet nowadays - sorry, lost track.

good luck,
Kay


On Wed, 21 Jun 2017 17:46:56 +0200, Vito Calderone <calder...@cerm.unifi.it> 
wrote:

>I am working on a protein having 360 residues. In its sequence there are 3
>Met and 5 free Cys.
>I will need MAD to solve the structure since based on the sequence the
>closest homologue has 20% identity�I suppose MR would be very unlikely to
>work�so I would like to express a selenium derivative to exploit MAD.
>Looking in the literature 1 Se-Met every 120 residues seems not to comply
>the threshold to get a good anomalous signal. For this reason I would like
>to exploit both Met and Cys so I would have 8 seleniums per 360 residues.
>Could somenone suggest a reference to a protocol to express the double
>mutant protein in NON auxotrophic strains of E. coli which you have
>experienced working efficiently?
>Thanks

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