The results open the possibility of applying the x-ray microdiffraction technique to study many other micrometer-sized assemblies of functional biomolecules in the cell. The spot-like appearance of reflections implies that the lattice order is extremely well maintained for a distance of millimeters, covering up to a thousand of approximately 2.5-microm-long sarcomeres connected in series. This also held true for some of the weak higher order reflections. The pattern consisted of a number of hexagonally symmetrical diffraction spots whose originating lattice planes were readily identified. We were able to record an x-ray diffraction pattern from a single myofilament lattice, very likely originating from a single myofibril from the flight muscle of a bumblebee, by orienting the incident x-ray microbeam along the myofibrillar axis (end-on diffraction). Because the lattices are randomly oriented, the fiber gives rise to an equatorial x-ray diffraction pattern, which is essentially a rotary-averaged "powder diffraction," carrying only information about the distance between the lattice planes. A striated muscle fiber consists of thousands of myofibrils with crystalline hexagonal myofilament lattices.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |