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The structures of a 14 kDa phospholipase, an 18 kDa proteinase inhibitor and a novel glycoside hydrolase with molecular weight 60 kDa were solved using the SAD technique and the effects of the amount of anomalous signal, completeness and redundancy of data on heavy-atom substructure determination, phasing and model building were analyzed. All diffraction data sets were collected on a Cu-anode X-ray home source. The structure of the phospholipase was obtained using the anomalous scattering contribution from its 16 S atoms. Three-dimensional models for the other two macromolecules were obtained using the anomalous contribution of I atoms rapidly incorporated into the crystal through the quick cryo-soaking method of derivatization. These results were used to discuss the application of sulfur- and iodine-SAD approaches in combination with X-ray home sources for high-throughput protein crystal structure solution. The estimates of the anomalous signal from S atoms in the gene products of four genomes are given and the prospects for increasing the anomalous contribution using longer wavelengths (e.g. from a chromium home source) and quick cryo-soaking derivatization are discussed. The possibility of rapidly preparing tangible home-source isomorphous derivatives suggests that this approach might become a valuable tool in the future of post-genomic projects.

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