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Radiation damage in macromolecular crystals is not suppressed even at 90 K. This is particularly true for covalent bonds involving an anomalous scatterer (such as bromine) at the peak wavelength'. It is shown that a series of absorption spectra recorded on a brominated RNA faithfully monitor the extent of cleavage. The continuous spectral changes during irradiation preserve an
isosbestic point', each spectrum being a linear combination of zero' and
infinite' dose spectra. This easily yields a good estimate of the partial occupancy of bromine at any intermediate dose. The considerable effect on the near-edge features in the spectra of the crystal orientation versus the beam polarization has also been examined and found to be in good agreement with a previous study. Any significant influence of the (C-Br bond/beam polarization) angle on the cleavage kinetics of bromine was also searched for, but was not detected. These results will be useful for standard SAD/MAD experiments and for the emerging radiation-damage-induced phasing' method exploiting both the anomalous signal of an anomalous scatterer and the
isomorphous' signal resulting from its cleavage.
Sandor Kasas, María Inés Villalba
Pascal Turberg, Charlotte Grossiord, Hervé Cochard, Laura Mekarni