13-05
High
resolution protein crystals using an efficient convection-free geometry,
Cryst. Growth Des. 13 (2013) 775-781
A. Adawy, E. Rebuffet, S. Törnroth-Horsefield, W.J. de Grip, W.J.P. van Enckevort,
E. Vlieg.
Abstract:
Macromolecular crystallography is the most direct and accurate approach to
determine the three-dimensional structure of biological macromolecules. The
growth of high quality single crystals, yielding diffraction to the highest
X-ray resolution, remains a bottleneck in this methodology. Here we show that
through a modification of the batch crystallization method, an entirely
convection-free crystallization environment is achieved, which enhances the
purity and crystallinity of protein crystals. This is
accomplished by using an upside-down geometry, where crystals grow at the
"ceiling" of a growth-cell completely filled with the crystallization
solution. The "ceiling crystals" experience the same
diffusion-limited conditions as in space microgravity experiments. The new
method was tested on bovine insulin and two hen egg-white lysozyme polymorphs.
In all cases, ceiling crystals diffracted X-rays to resolution limits beyond
that for other methods using similar crystallization conditions without further
optimization. In addition, we demonstrate that the ceiling crystallization
method leads to crystals with much lower impurity incorporation.