11MU image
Deposition Date 2026-03-05
Release Date 2026-04-08
Last Version Date 2026-04-08
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
11MU
Keywords:
Title:
Influenza A virus Hemagglutinin (A/Darwin/6/2021 H3N2) (C1 symmetry) determined using the SPT Labtech chameleon in the presence of 1x SurfACT
Biological Source:
Source Organism(s):
Expression System(s):
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Resolution:
2.67 Å
Aggregation State:
PARTICLE
Reconstruction Method:
SINGLE PARTICLE
Macromolecular Entities
Structures with similar UniProt ID
Protein Blast
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Molecule:Hemagglutinin
Gene (Uniprot):HA
Chain IDs:A, B, C
Chain Length:565
Number of Molecules:3
Biological Source:Influenza A virus
Primary Citation
A Surfactant Cocktail Overcomes Air-Water Interface Artifacts in Single-Particle CryoEM.
Biorxiv ? ? ? (2026)
PMID: 41889805 DOI: 10.64898/2026.03.17.712260

Abstact

Single-particle cryogenic electron microscopy (cryoEM) is a widely used technique for structure determination of biomacromolecules to near-atomic resolution. Random distributions of these molecules in vitrified ice are necessary to accumulate enough two-dimensional views to generate a complete three-dimensional (3-D) reconstruction. However, interactions between the sample and the air-water interface (AWI) that occur during vitrification often bias the views of the sample, a phenomenon termed preferred orientation, limiting our ability to obtain 3-D reconstructions. Surfactants are often used as sample additives to prevent AWI-induced deterioration, but no general strategy exists for surfactant choice, requiring laborious screening for each sample. To circumvent these issues, we developed SurfACT, a cocktail of diverse surfactants with distinct physicochemical properties that limits AWI-dependent sample denaturation and orientation bias, while mitigating individual surfactant-specific drawbacks. Here we demonstrate SurfACT's effectiveness with four proteins plagued by AWI-induced issues, including two species of hemagglutinin (HA), molybdenum-iron protein (MoFeP) from the nitrogenase enzyme, and aldolase. All four samples show drastically improved viewing distribution and map completeness when SurfACT is applied. Cryogenic electron tomography demonstrates that SurfACT redistributes particles from the AWI into the bulk ice, driving signal recovery and inhibiting denaturation. This versatile sample additive minimizes sample-specific screening and expands the capabilities and range of suitable samples for cryoEM.

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Primary Citation of related structures
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