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Cyclic olefin homopolymer-based microfluidics for protein crystallization and in situ X-ray diffraction

โœ Scribed by Emamzadah, Soheila ;Petty, Tom J. ;De Almeida, Victor ;Nishimura, Taisuke ;Joly, Jacques ;Ferrer, Jean-Luc ;Halazonetis, Thanos D.


Publisher
International Union of Crystallography
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
909 KB
Volume
65
Category
Article
ISSN
0907-4449

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โœฆ Synopsis


Microfluidics is a promising technology for the rapid identification of protein crystallization conditions. However, most of the existing systems utilize silicone elastomers as the chip material which, despite its many benefits, is highly permeable to water vapour. This limits the time available for protein crystallization to less than a week. Here, the use of a cyclic olefin homopolymer-based microfluidics system for protein crystallization and in situ X-ray diffraction is described. Liquid handling in this system is performed in 2 mm thin transparent cards which contain 500 chambers, each with a volume of 320 nl. Microbatch, vapour-diffusion and free-interface diffusion protocols for protein crystallization were implemented and crystals were obtained of a number of proteins, including chicken lysozyme, bovine trypsin, a human p53 protein containing both the DNA-binding and oligomerization domains bound to DNA and a functionally important domain of Arabidopsis Morpheus' molecule 1 (MOM1). The latter two polypeptides have not been crystallized previously. For X-ray diffraction analysis, either the cards were opened to allow mounting of the crystals on loops or the crystals were exposed to X-rays in situ. For lysozyme, an entire X-ray diffraction data set at 1.5 A resolution was collected without removing the crystal from the card. Thus, cyclic olefin homopolymer-based microfluidics systems have the potential to further automate protein crystallization and structural genomics efforts.


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