Volume 12, Issue 6 pp. 779-785

Crystallizing proteins on the basis of their precipitation diagram determined using a microfluidic formulator

Morten O. A. Sommer

Morten O. A. Sommer

Centre for Crystallographic Studies, Department of Chemistry, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

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Sine Larsen

Sine Larsen

Centre for Crystallographic Studies, Department of Chemistry, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

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First published: 31 October 2005

Abstract

Crystallization of proteins from a purified protein solution remains a bottleneck in the structure determination pipeline. In this paper the crystallization problem is addressed using a microfluidic device capable of determining detailed protein precipitation diagrams using less than 10 µL of protein sample. Based on the experimentally determined protein phase behavior, a crystallization screen can be designed to accommodate the physical chemistry of the particular protein target. Such a tailor-made crystallization screen has a high probability of yielding crystallization hits. The approach is applied to two different proteins: the calcium pump (SERCA), an eukaryotic integral membrane protein, and UMP kinase, a prokaryotic soluble kinase. Protein phase behavior is mapped for both proteins and tailor-made crystallization screens are designed for the two proteins resulting in about 50% crystallization probability per experiment. This illustrates the power of using microfluidic devices for detailed characterization of protein phase behavior prior to crystallization trials.

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