Our laboratory is using 3-D electron microscopy (3DEM) to determine the structures
of proteins and macromolecular assemblages in muscle and the cytoskeleton.
One of our projects investigates the structure of myosin crossbridges in different
states using the highly ordered filament lattice of insect flight muscle (IFM).
In concert with the structural studies, we are developing 3-D reconstruction
algorithms uniquely suitable for studying muscle structure
We are also developing methods for analyzing the structure of paracrystalline
specimens. This research is an outgrowth of our studies on IFM structure but
the technology is applicable to many paracrystalline specimens. One of these
techniques is a unique tomographic reconstruction method that uses crosscorrelation
methods to align the images in a tilt series. To deal with the specimen disorder,
which is manifest as variations in crossbridge structure, we are extending
the widely used methods of 2-D correspondence analysis to 3-D motifs obtained
by tomography. Finally, the knowledge of the atomic structure of the two important
proteins in muscle contraction, myosin and actin, provides a unique opportunity
to extend the low resolution information obtained by 3DEM to atomic resolution.
The first and most important step in electron crystallography is the formation
of 2-D crystalline arrays, which are the most suitable specimen for this technique.
The first protein that we have successfully crystallized by this method is
alpha-actinin. We have also developed technology for assembly of multiprotein
complexes on lipid monolayers as 2-D paracrystalline arrays. These arrays
make structural analysis easier because they remove superposition problems
that complicate image interpretation. The methodology for formation of what
we call 2-D bundles open a number of avenues for research into the structure
of the cytoskeleton.