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Ng, J.D.; Clark, P.J.; Stevens, R.C.; Kuhn, P.
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (United States). Funding organisation: US Department of Energy (United States)2008
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (United States). Funding organisation: US Department of Energy (United States)2008
AbstractAbstract
[en] Plastic microchannel crystallization template designs made from inexpensive cyclic olefin copolymers have been shown to be low-birefringent, X-ray transmissive and compatible with microfluidic fabrication in restricted geometry. The model proteins thaumatin, lysozyme and bacteriorhodopsin demonstrated the feasibility of conducting counter-diffusion equilibration within the new plastic configuration. Crystals of each of these proteins were directly evaluated in situ using synchrotron radiation and their diffraction quality was evaluated without invasive manipulation or cryofreezing. Protein crystals able to produce complete X-ray data sets were used to calculate electron-density maps for structure determination. Fluidic crystallization in the plastic platform was also coupled with a commercialized automated imager and an in situ X-ray scanner that allowed optical and X-ray inspection of crystallization hits. The results demonstrate the feasibility of rapid nanovolume counter-diffusion crystallization experiments without the need for additional instrumentation
Source
SLAC-REPRINT--2009-256; AC02-76SF00515
Record Type
Journal Article
Journal
Acta Crystallographica. Section D: Biological Crystallography; ISSN 0907-4449; ; v. 64(2); p. 189-197
Country of publication
BREMSSTRAHLUNG, COHERENT SCATTERING, ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION, ENZYMES, GLYCOSYL HYDROLASES, HYDROCARBONS, HYDROLASES, MATERIALS, MATHEMATICS, O-GLYCOSYL HYDROLASES, ORGANIC COMPOUNDS, ORGANIC POLYMERS, PETROCHEMICALS, PETROLEUM PRODUCTS, PHASE TRANSFORMATIONS, POLYMERS, PROTEINS, RADIATIONS, SCATTERING, SYNTHETIC MATERIALS
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