Mark,

 

What was the state of the larger drops when tiny counterparts had
crystals? My guess - they all precipitated.

I'm trying to understand why some proteins or some conditions require
change in protein concentration while others do not when migrating from
smaller drops to larger ones. If it is protein dependent then I'm afraid
there might be no one answer; if it is not then there should be a trend
and explanation of phenomena.

 

 

Vaheh 

________________________________

From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, January 16, 2008 8:31 PM
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] crystallisation robot

 

Once upon a time I worked in a group that was interested in developing
crystallization in microfluidics. This was before the time that Fluidigm
existed and we had not heard of crystallization with the aid of
microfluidics at the time. We had good reason to try to make a system
that was as small and light as possible - it had something to do with
the cost of shipping proteins and precipitants - less was better. And we
also wanted all protein drops to be fully enclosed, out of safety
considerations.

Like Tassos, we were very worried what would happen if you scaled back
drops along the lines of this discussion - several uL downto tens of
nanoliters. If the stochastic process had a major influence over this
process, we thought that we would never get any crystals. So we set up
side-by-side experiments at larger volumes and smaller volumes -
basically scanning several orders of magnitude - expecting a decrease of
the number of crystals when volumes decrease. To our great surprise the
outcome was that smaller volumes almost always gave MORE (I almost want
to say 'dramatically more') crystals, more nucleation, and indeed in
various cases the crystals grew much faster also. Indeed, it was trivial
to observe that the surface-to-volume ratio was the primary driver for
the nucleation process. We had control over geometry to some extent and
were able to observe surfaces while crystals grow. The crystals would
most commonly nucleate on a surface. 

So although there probably is something to stochastic aspects, it is
clear that other aspects can be more important and "overrule" the
stochastic considerations.
The somewhat unpleasant consquence is of course that results acquired in
very small volumes (with larger surface-to-volume ratio) cannot
necessarily be repeated in larger volumes (smaller surface-to-volume
ratio).

This is not a flame, even if heat might be a good thing on a night with
temperatures predicted far below 0F.

 :-)

Mark

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Anastassis Perrakis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Sent: Wed, 16 Jan 2008 6:17 am
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] crystallisation robot

> Oryxnano 50+50 nL 
> 
> Demetres 
> 
 
Which, indirectly, brings up an interesting (but not relevant to the
Oryx) question. 
 
Nucleation is a process that does have a stochastic aspect. 
 
Thus, one could argue that compromising to 200-300 nl might be better
than either extremes of 50nl (too small volume and less chance for
nucleation) or 1000 nl (too much sample). 
 
any comments ? (let the flames begin). 
 
A. 
 
PS1 
another interesting issue that has has been hardly touched in these
emails is the real sample loss: left in wells and not easy to recover,
lost because of contamination with system liquid, etc ... 
 
PS2 
I see lots of people with new robots. please do have a look at the
www.BIOXHIT.org page and if you have a few minutes to assemble a table
we will be happy to add your specs to our pages. it can be a nice
resource and it has already enough things and already one response to my
last email ;-) To make life easier to potential contributors we can
provide an Excel sheet to fill up with your specs - just ask. 
 
On Jan 16, 2008, at 12:46, Demetres D. Leonidas wrote: 
 
> 
> David Briggs wrote: 
>> I'll defend the honour of the phoenix... (again) 
>> 
>> Bernhard Rupp 100+100 nl 
>> Dave Briggs (and all users at Univ of Manchester, UK) 100+100nl 
>> Others.. 
>> 
>> Only time we have ANY problems is when the nano dispensing tip >>
gets clogged. Often a good wash whilst still on the machine will >>
clear the blockage. 
>> 
>> Dave 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> -->> ============================ 
>> David C. Briggs PhD 
>> Father & Crystallographer 
>> http://www.dbriggs.talktalk.net <http://www.dbriggs.talktalk.net> 
>> AIM ID: dbassophile 
>> ============================ 
> 
> --> Demetres D. Leonidas, Ph.D. 
> Structural Biology & Chemistry Group 
> Institute of Organic and Pharmaceutical Chemistry 
> The National Hellenic Research Foundation 
> 48, Vassileos Constantinou Avenue 
> Athens 116 35, Greece 
> ================================================== 
> Tel. +30 210 7273841 (office) 
> +30 210 7273895 (lab) Fax. +30 210 7273831 
> E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> URL: http://athena.eie.gr 
> ================================================== 

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