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Sébastien Boutet

Researcher at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

Publications -  221
Citations -  19765

Sébastien Boutet is an academic researcher from SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Femtosecond & Laser. The author has an hindex of 61, co-authored 207 publications receiving 17171 citations. Previous affiliations of Sébastien Boutet include Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory & Fermilab.

Papers
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Femtosecond X-ray protein nanocrystallography

Henry N. Chapman, +88 more
- 03 Feb 2011 - 
TL;DR: This work offers a new approach to structure determination of macromolecules that do not yield crystals of sufficient size for studies using conventional radiation sources or are particularly sensitive to radiation damage, by using pulses briefer than the timescale of most damage processes.
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Single mimivirus particles intercepted and imaged with an X-ray laser

M. Marvin Seibert, +88 more
- 03 Feb 2011 - 
TL;DR: This work shows that high-quality diffraction data can be obtained with a single X-ray pulse from a non-crystalline biological sample, a single mimivirus particle, which was injected into the pulsed beam of a hard-X-ray free-electron laser, the Linac Coherent Light Source.
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High-Resolution Protein Structure Determination by Serial Femtosecond Crystallography

TL;DR: Serial femtosecond crystallography (SFX) is applied using an x-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) to obtain high-resolution structural information from microcrystals of the well-characterized model protein lysozyme, demonstrating the immediate relevance of SFX for analyzing the structure of the large group of difficult-to-crystallize molecules.
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Crystal structure of rhodopsin bound to arrestin by femtosecond X-ray laser

Yanyong Kang, +71 more
- 30 Jul 2015 - 
TL;DR: The crystal structure of a constitutively active form of human rhodopsin bound to a pre-activated form of the mouse visual arrestin is determined by serial femtosecond X-ray laser crystallography and provides a basis for understanding GPCR-mediated arrestin-biased signalling.