This paper reviews the work made by the group of the present author on the effect of impurities on the kinetics of crystal growth in solutions. The impurity effect is here discussed in the light of the model proposed by Kubota and Mullin [J. Crystal Growth, 152 (1995) 86], in which impurities are as
The effect of protein impurities on lysozyme crystal growth
โ Scribed by Russell A. Judge; Elizabeth L. Forsythe; Marc L. Pusey
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 226 KB
- Volume
- 59
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3592
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โฆ Synopsis
While bulk crystallization from impure solutions is used industrially as a purification step for a wide variety of materials, it is a technique that has rarely been used for proteins. Proteins have a reputation for being difficult to crystallize and high purity of the initial crystallization solution is considered paramount for success in the crystallization. Although little is written on the purifying capability of protein crystallization or of the effect of impurities on the various aspects of the crystallization process, recent published reports show that crystallization shows promise and feasibility as a purification technique for proteins.
To further examine the issue of purity in macromolecule crystallization, this study investigates the effect of the protein impurities, avidin, ovalbumin, and conalbumin at concentrations up to 50%, on the solubility, crystal face growth rates, and crystal purity of the protein lysozyme. Solubility was measured in batch experiments while a computer controlled video microscope system was used to measure the {110} and {101} lysozyme crystal face growth rates. While little effect was observed on solubility and high crystal purity was obtained (>99.99%), the effect of the impurities on the face growth rates varied from no effect to a significant face specific effect leading to growth cessation, a phenomenon that is frequently observed in protein crystal growth. The results shed interesting light on the effect of protein impurities on protein crystal growth and strengthen the feasibility of using crystallization as a unit operation for protein purification.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The changes of electron density due to the presence of a localized impurity in a crystal lattice are examined in dependence on the lattice dimensionality. The Koster-Slater impurity model developed for the case of a three-dimensional simple cubic lattice has been taken as the basis of examinations.