>The Fourier transform of electron density is a complex scattering amplitude 
>that by the axiom of quantum mechanics is not a measurable quantity. What is 
>measurable is the module squared of it. In crystallography, it is called either
F^2 (formally equal F*Fbar) or somewhat informally diffraction intensity, after 
one takes into account scaling factors. F*Fbar is the Fourier transform of an 
electron density autocorrelation function regardless if electron density is 
periodic or not. For periodic electron density the structure factors are 
described by sum of delta Dirac functions placed on the reciprocal lattice. 
These delta functions are multiplied by values of structure factors for 
corresponding Miller indices.

Okay, I may have been confused--I thought that the Fourier transform was 
essentially acting like an autocorrelation function (since generally Fourier 
transforms are similar to autocorrelation functions--not clear on the details 
right now), and I had thought I had heard stories of days of yore handwritten 
Fourier series calculations to make electron density maps. You're telling me 
they had to also back-calculate an autocorrelation function? Times were tough! 
Maybe someone from that generation can chime in about how they dealt with this?

>This is interesting case of pseudocrystal, however because there is no crystal 
>lattice, it is not relevant to (1) or (2). In any case, pentagonal 
>quasilattices are probably not relevant to macromolecular crystallography.

I tried a few simulations to show what I mean but ran out of time--sorry about 
that. I think I'll probably just drop this.

NB Linus Pauling said more forcefully the same prediction about aperiodic 
crystals in general not existing, pentagonal or otherwise, but was proven dead 
wrong by now-Nobel laureate Dan Shechtman. Maybe someone will come across an 
aperiodic protein crystal, or already has and missed it, and stupefy us all. 
Someone mentioned to me once seeing personally a ten-fold symmetrical 
diffraction pattern from a protein crystal, but she dismissed it with exactly 
the argument that Pauling made, I think that it was a twinned cubic space group.

>This is easy to test by analyzing diffraction patterns of individual crystals. 
In practice, the dominant contribution to angular broadening of diffraction 
peaks is angular disorder of microdomains, particularly in cryo-cooled 
crystals. 
However, exceptions do happen, but these rare situations need to be handled on 
case by case basis.

I was thinking of this paper for example (see last line of abstract). Perhaps 
other crystals are different from lysozyme, though, as you mention.

All the best,

Jacob Keller

Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr. 1998 Sep 1;54(Pt 5):848-53.
A description of imperfections in protein crystals.
Nave C.
Author information
Abstract
An analysis is given of the contribution of various crystal imperfections to 
the rocking widths of reflections and the divergence of the diffracted beams. 
The crystal imperfections are the angular spread of the mosaic blocks in the 
crystal, the size of the mosaic blocks and the variation in cell dimensions 
between blocks. The analysis has implications for improving crystal perfection, 
defining data-collection requirements and for data-processing procedures. 
Measurements on crystals of tetragonal lysozyme at room temperature and 100 K 
were made in order to illustrate how parameters describing the crystal 
imperfections can be obtained. At 100 K, the dominant imperfection appeared to 
be a variation in unit-cell dimensions in the crystal.
PMID: 9757100 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

Reply via email to