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Science 20 June 2003:
Vol. 300. no. 5627, pp. 1944 - 1947
DOI: 10.1126/science.1078797


Abstract
Full Text
Watching a Protein as it Functions with 150-ps Time-Resolved X-ray Crystallography
Friedrich Schotte, Manho Lim, Timothy A. Jackson, Aleksandr V. Smirnov, Jayashree Soman, John S. Olson, George N. Phillips Jr., Michael Wulff, and Philip A. Anfinrud

Supporting Online Material

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Note: This file was corrected on 22 July 2003 to remove extraneous comments.

Revised supplement

[The originally posted version is available below.]


This supplement contains:

Materials and Methods
Table S1

Original supplement



To view these movies, download a QuickTime viewer.

  • Movie S1
    A moving average of the time-resolved electron density maps was constructed from the image with laser off at time points 100 ps, 316 ps, 1 ns, 3.16 ns, 31.6 ns, 316 ns, and 3.16 Greek Letter Mus (each frame represents a weighted average of the electron density from adjacent time points). The numerical time indicator advances at the midpoint between adjacent time points. The yellow circles enclose electron density likely arising from CO; the solid lines switch to dashed lines when CO departs from that site.





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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)