Re: [ccp4bb] Enzyme kinetics

2015-05-08 Thread R. M. Garavito
Rohit, Yes, you are wise to worry about this coupled reaction for a number of reasons. Your question allows me to pull my head out of grading lab final exams on this very concept. I agree with Herman's and Roger's comments. I have a couple of other items to mention: Luckily, NAD(H)-linked en

Re: [ccp4bb] Crystallization of a minority fraction monomers

2015-04-08 Thread R. M. Garavito
y “selecting for the least soluble” oligomeric state > we would rarely crystallize proteins as dimers. > > Crystallization is such a confusing process J > > Thierry > > From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of R. M. > Garavito > Se

Re: [ccp4bb] Crystallisation of a minority fraction monomers

2015-04-08 Thread R. M. Garavito
I just wanted to disagree with Roger's word choice, but not his argument (this is a "flame"-free response). Forget about "packing" and "packable" as there is no outside force doing the work. The molecules are just falling into a local energy minimum where favorable intra- and intermolecular in

Re: [ccp4bb] asymmetric homotrimer in the asu

2014-12-11 Thread R. M. Garavito
Dear Hay, And your point is? I am not trying to be snarky (although I am just starting my morning coffee), but to bring up the fact that CCP4BB readers need more info to comment on your case, like space group, local interactions, and how packed is "tightly packed." I have had two cases of "

Re: [ccp4bb] unknown densities

2014-12-09 Thread R. M. Garavito
Yamei, This is not unusual, particularly for many proteins that bind nucleotide derivatives, especially GDP/GTP binding proteins, as Nat said. If it is GDP that is tightly bound at high occupancy, it should be quite easy to identify because of the pyrophosphates and the guanine ring. To build

Re: [ccp4bb] fastening crystal formation

2014-10-31 Thread R. M. Garavito
Although three months is a long time, it is no completely unheard of, and does not require the invocation of proteolysis. The longest time I have heard of is ~1 yr, so count yourself lucky. However to get good advice, as well as to use it, you need to ask yourself several questions: 1. What

Re: [ccp4bb] off-topic;Crystal cannot dissolved in buffer

2014-09-26 Thread R. M. Garavito
Xiao, You could be the victim of the dreaded PEG cross-linking effect. One of the unfortunate by-products of keeping PEG stock solutions in water is that they will form peroxides and aldehydes. They will slowly cross-link the surface of some crystals. However, it is dependent on the nature o

[ccp4bb]

2014-08-19 Thread R. M. Garavito
Prishant, Remember that concentrating by almost any method is a non-uniform process. In your case, right at the membrane the concentration is much higher than in the surrounding solution. As Chris says, frequent efforts to keep the solution well mixed can prevent precipitation. As you mix, l

Re: [ccp4bb] Removing PEG3350

2014-08-19 Thread R. M. Garavito
Reza, If your protein is not too small (>20 kDa), use a spin-column (i.e., desalting column) with G-25 sephedex. It is CHEAP, fast, and the recovery is good. We have even used them to adjust buffer concentrations or to remove micellar detergents; we have used protein concentrations up to 10 m

[ccp4bb]

2014-08-18 Thread R. M. Garavito
Avisek, Besides the advice that Bernhard and Remy have given you, beware of strange packing arrangements with low symmetry space groups and higher order oligomers. We have had several cases in P21 and C2 where tetramers pack with 6 or 8 molecules in the asymmetric unit (ASU), but could not be

Re: [ccp4bb] PEG dependent structural changes in crystal structure

2014-08-06 Thread R. M. Garavito
Shiv, PEG1500 and PEG3350 are not the same because of the nature of their synthesis and manufacture. They are a polydisperse and semi-purified products of an ethylene oxide condensation. So while they are described as H-(CH2-CH2-O)-OH, the value of and its ranges are quite different. Some

Re: [ccp4bb] Heavy Atom Phasing

2014-07-28 Thread R. M. Garavito
Rhys, If crystals grow reproducibly and within a reasonable timeframe, I would always do co-crystallization, particularly if the HA is a good anomalous scatterer. We have had good success with this method, including a recent membrane protein structure. Even if you get crystals that are not is

Re: [ccp4bb] equivalent osmotic pressures for xtal transfer

2014-07-28 Thread R. M. Garavito
Frank, It is not just osmotic factors that need balancing, but the fact that polymers and salts don't always mix well. PEG and high salt can form 2-phase systems that don't disperse well, particularly in a crystal. Check out Ray et al. (Biochemistry 1991, 30, 6866-6875) where Bill Ray and and

Re: [ccp4bb] How to store PEG screens

2014-07-14 Thread R. M. Garavito
Jerome, >> Does anyone know the best way to store crystallization >> screening blocks that contain PEG 3350? I would recommend storing them in a fridge or a clean coldroom (mold-free). Lower temperature and low light does help. >> Is it a good idea to freeze the PEG solutions >> at -80°C and

Re: [ccp4bb] cannot reproduce crystals

2014-07-14 Thread R. M. Garavito
You may unleash a deluge of anecdotes and horror stories, but this is quite common. I have experienced this many times, and you just need to step back and ask yourself what is being done differently: 1. Are all materials used in the preparation of the protein the same (suppliers, sources, exp

Re: [ccp4bb] HisTrap Trap

2014-05-19 Thread R. M. Garavito
Bernhard, One other point, after rereading your email. For step-elution ion exchange (quick on, quick off), you can use some very cheap and quite robust media the will resist a lot of stuff. Have them pour their own columns and toss it away when it gets too dirty. You don't have to use the h

Re: [ccp4bb] HisTrap Trap

2014-05-19 Thread R. M. Garavito
Bernhard, We have had similar, but not identical issues with some insect cell media, as well as column interference by lipid. If we see this, we tend to run all the material with the protein (cell lysate or media) through step-elution ion exchange (quick on, quick off). While the purification

Re: [ccp4bb] Issue with Molecules per Asymmetric Unit for Molecular Replacement

2014-05-16 Thread R. M. Garavito
Matt, In addition to the suggestions of the others, have you done a simple self rotation function? It can tell you quite a bit about how things are packed and give you strict criteria for choosing one solution over another. As Roger said, choosing an even number of monomers in the ASU is a go

[ccp4bb] Helix alignment and movement

2014-05-13 Thread R. M. Garavito
Dear Eugene and other CCP4ers The recent discussion about superposition has prompted me to ask about a different kind of superposition problem. We are working on a small dimeric protein that is entirely made up of helices. Instead of large, concerted domain movements, which I am quite familia

Re: [ccp4bb] maltose binding protein

2014-03-27 Thread R. M. Garavito
Rana, It is hard to answer you question without more details (MW and pI of your target protein). MBP binds very well to amylose resins and is usually quite easily bound to anion exchange resins. Did you just run a "standard" ion exchange protocol or try different pH regimes? However, you did

Re: [ccp4bb] off-topic: protein losing FAD during purification

2014-03-14 Thread R. M. Garavito
Stefano, Before you address the problem, you need to ask yourself a couple of things. You say that "on the gel filtration we clearly see two bands corresponding to holoprotein and free FAD." That is not too odd, but have you ask the question is all the protein good protein. Is this an enzy

Re: [ccp4bb] Determining concentration of membrane protein

2014-02-13 Thread R. M. Garavito
Roger, While I agree with your list, the BCA assay does not use molybdate (as we make it from scratch with bicinchoninic acid, sodium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, sodium tartrate, and cupric sulfate pentahydrate). For membrane proteins, I prefer the BCA assay until the protein is pure enough

Re: [ccp4bb] largest protein crystal ever grown?

2013-10-25 Thread R. M. Garavito
Felix, Although I have passed through George's lab at UCSD several times, I have not seen that crystal, but it should be pointed out that George's interests did extend beyond photosynthesis. Some of us older folks remember George's contributions to protein crystal growth, both theoretical and

Re: [ccp4bb] Staining Crystals with comassie

2013-10-16 Thread R. M. Garavito
There are many caveats to using glutaraldehyde on crystals, either for fixing crystals or for "staining" them. First, I would not hang a 1-2uL drop of 25% glutaraldehyde in the vapour diffusion chamber, but add enough glutaraldehyde into the reservoir to make it 0.5-1.0 % (a 1:25 or 1:50 dilu

Re: [ccp4bb] limited proteolysis / ms

2013-10-09 Thread R. M. Garavito
Gloria, Here is how we are now doing it, courtesy of Yu-Jing's and Merlin's fine development work. We have also tried it to quantitatively remove tags by TEV cleavage, but we haven't solved that problem yet. Regards, Michael Tan, Yu-Jing, Wei-Han Wang, Yi Zheng, Jinlan Dong, Giovanni Stefano

Re: [ccp4bb] Identity of a Bacterial lipid

2013-10-03 Thread R. M. Garavito
Dear Andre, It always impressive to see a near atomic resolution structure with a bound lipid. Congratulations. However, to identify what lipid you have requires a bit more analysis than just looking in databases. First, what is the bacterium you are using as the host? If it is E. coli, the

Re: [ccp4bb] membrane protein and phase separation

2013-08-02 Thread R. M. Garavito
Pascal, The reason this phenomenon looks odd to you is that detergent phase separation is not a micelle size phenomenon, but a micelle surface phenomenon. Like any colloidal solution, even protein, there can be conditions where the colloidal particles aggregate (the cloud point), creating a mi

Re: [ccp4bb] Dose anyone see this ligand before?

2013-07-17 Thread R. M. Garavito
Wei I heartily second Dale's comment. Since you do know what has been in contact with your protein, you should be able to make a list of ALL POSSIBLE compounds your protein has been exposed to. However, don't go off the deep end. You say that "We guess that the molecular formula should be C8H

Re: [ccp4bb] Concentrating purified membrane protein

2013-07-15 Thread R. M. Garavito
; toufic el arnaout > School of Medicine - 660 S Euclid Ave > Washington University in St. Louis > St Louis, MO 63110, USA > > > From: CCP4 bulletin board [CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] on behalf of R. M. Garavito > [rmgarav...@gmail.com] > Sent: Sunday, July 14, 2013 11:17 AM >

Re: [ccp4bb] Concentrating purified membrane protein

2013-07-14 Thread R. M. Garavito
Raji, One point the most people forget about is that whenever you concentrate any detergent-solubilized membrane protein is that you will ALWAYS concentrate the detergent. So regardless of the MWCO, if the protein-detergent complex concentrates, the overall detergent concentration also increas

Re: [ccp4bb] Harmful effect of X-ray

2013-07-12 Thread R. M. Garavito
Most modern textbooks have sections on the proper protections and measures to take, although the information may be dated. See chapter 6 in Volume III of the International Tables for X-ray Crystallography. With the modern equipment and regulatory measures in most countries, you really have to

Re: [ccp4bb] Heterogeneity during purification

2013-07-09 Thread R. M. Garavito
Dear Teresa, In addition to Bert's excellent list, I have found that many membrane proteins aggregate in regular SDS-PAGE sample buffer, particularly when heated. In the best case, we always see "dimers" or, in the worst case, a ladder or smear of aggregates. If you heat your SDS-PAGE samples

Re: [ccp4bb] Puzzling observation about size exclusion chromatography

2013-06-21 Thread R. M. Garavito
Dear Zhen, I should also point out that the statement Matt made ("Superdex is known to have some ion-exchange characteristics, so that it can weakly interact with some proteins.") is not completely correct. Superdex and all chromatographic media made from carbohydrates (dextran, agarose, etc.)

Re: [ccp4bb] Self rotation function interpretation

2013-02-11 Thread R. M. Garavito
Emma, You need to provide more information. Luckily, I222 is orthorhombic, so a* is along a, b* is along b, and c* is along c. This makes things so much easier to interpret. I hope the plotting conventions you used are typical: b along +y (North pole), a along +x (to the right), and c perpen

Re: [ccp4bb] protein crystals or salt crystals

2013-02-08 Thread R. M. Garavito
Ed, > Protein crystals are fragile but not soft. > If your crystals are like gelatine it's unusual. I hate to disagree with the disagreement, but there are many exceptions to this rule. I have seen many protein crystals that are quite malleable and bendable. One protein produced rod-shape

Re: [ccp4bb] vitrification vs freezing

2012-11-16 Thread R. M. Garavito
Actually, to echo Ron, many low-temperature/freezing/vitrification crystal experiments were done in the 1970's, some by Tsernoglou and Petsko, when they were both at Wayne State, I believe. However, the direction Jacques Dubochet was looking at was an extension of work from the early 1960's. E

Re: [ccp4bb] Reservoir buffer

2012-11-13 Thread R. M. Garavito
Theresa, In addition to the comments provided, you do need to consider the vapor diffusion experiment process as a whole. The primary reasons why we put the precipitant mixture in the reservoir, aside from being lazy, is (1) it provides a straight forward and partially accurate starting point

Re: [ccp4bb] protein cleavage

2012-11-05 Thread R. M. Garavito
Dear Rana, I think you need to clear up some confusion about this experiment. MBP fusions suffer from a number of drawbacks depending on what you are doing. First, did you use the MPB domain to purify the fusion protein (with an amylose column)? If so, you also purified native MBP from the E

Re: [ccp4bb] off-topic: detergents for the stabilisation of water-soluble proteins

2012-10-12 Thread R. M. Garavito
Vitali, Echoing what Dan said, I am not sure why you have chosen detergents first, as there are many other agents which stabilize proteins. Is the instability due to hydrophobic surfaces (e.g., made worse at higher salt) or not. Some non-detergent suggestions are: 1) diols like MPD (see work

Re: [ccp4bb] sarkosyl

2012-09-20 Thread R. M. Garavito
Rajan, This is old news. Ron Kaplan published a lot about sarcosyl extraction of native mitochondrial carrier proteins from "inclusion bodies" in the late 1990's, but there is an equally robust literature stating that sarcosyl is a denaturant. It is very much dependent on a protein's characte

Re: [ccp4bb] sarkosyl

2012-09-20 Thread R. M. Garavito
Rashmi, What you ask is impossible to answer because you have not given us any details. Sodium sarcosyl (or sarcosine) is a very problematic, but useful detergent. For some proteins, it is an effective denaturant (hence the denaturing/refolding protocols in the literature); for others, it is

Re: [ccp4bb] the lysozyme of membrane proteins?

2012-09-12 Thread R. M. Garavito
Ho, A second the vote for OmpF, but many porins could do. Although it is a little harder to purify from native membranes, OmpF has the advantage that it can be crystallized in about 1-2 hours from a simple detergent solution with different PEGs AND (!!!) it is as stable as a rock (you can drop

Re: [ccp4bb] Process multiple data sets

2012-08-02 Thread R. M. Garavito
Uma, Before this discussion goes much further, you need to provide more details: 1) putative space group? 2) observed resolution and diffraction anisotropy? 3) how big was the crystal and what was its shape? Was the crystal split? 4) were the data sets taken at different points on the crystal?

Re: [ccp4bb] Somewhat OT: question of professional courtesy

2012-07-25 Thread R. M. Garavito
Evette, I think the primary issue is what kind of analysis was being reported on. That is what I look for when I review a manuscript. If the authors are doing a broad structural analysis (homology of TIM barrels, X-ray refinement protocols, etc.), I wouldn't expect citations beyond stating th

Re: [ccp4bb] cryo for high salt crystal

2012-07-12 Thread R. M. Garavito
Roger's note reminded me of some older literature (old in the sense that this problem extends back into the mid-1970's). Dealing with cryopreservation of crystals grown in "high" salt can be a real problem, but as many people have pointed out, the normal cryoprotectants can work, although many

Re: [ccp4bb] The effect of His-tag location on crystallization

2012-06-27 Thread R. M. Garavito
Most of the comments you will get will be anecdotal in that people will report the successful results and do not take the time or effort to characterize the less successful results. This often occurs because the tagged portion of the protein is most often disordered, even in the best crystals.

Re: [ccp4bb] help regarding structure solution

2012-06-20 Thread R. M. Garavito
Dear Sonali, I think that first item on your possible to-do list is to verify that you have indeed crystallized the protein you purified. We, too, got great crystals once with protein X (100 kD) and noticed that 1) the lattice constants, space group symmetry, and Matthew's coefficient were wit

Re: [ccp4bb] how to get phase of huge complex

2012-06-13 Thread R. M. Garavito
Lisa, As others have said, using careful data collection and the modern program suites available (SHARP, Phenix, etc.), a 300 KD complex with 111 Se-Met residues should be quite solvable. But you didn't state is what is in the asymmetric unit (the important figure): one complex with 111 Se-Me

Re: [ccp4bb] saxs on xtals

2012-05-08 Thread R. M. Garavito
Dear Anna, I know that you already have gotten replies from some top experts, but your intriguing problem brought up some issues I have run across in the past. First, from you experience with single crystal diffraction, your results are not that much different from those seen in virus structu

Re: [ccp4bb] detergent or protein

2012-05-07 Thread R. M. Garavito
Anita, To answer a lot of your questions, you need to provide some more information about your protein, at least some of its biophysical characteristics (size, oligomeric state, an integral membrane protein, etc.). Just because you are using detergents does not mean all your problems are deter

Re: [ccp4bb] detergent crystal?

2012-04-27 Thread R. M. Garavito
rmgarav...@gmail.com On Apr 27, 2012, at 10:54 AM, Jacob Keller wrote: > Wouldn't the lack of solubility of the alpha form of DDM suggest an easy > purification protocol for the beta form? > > JPK > > On Fr

Re: [ccp4bb] detergent crystal?

2012-04-27 Thread R. M. Garavito
Hongjun, I am in agreement with Bert as DDM is exceedingly difficult to crystallize, even in organic solvents. This is one of the reasons it is so expensive. However, you can produce a lot of "quasi"-crystals that do show low resolution diffraction. As Bert said, you may have protein/deterge

Re: [ccp4bb] CCP4I on an imac

2011-10-10 Thread R. M. Garavito
Rex, Can give us a bit more detail (OS version, source of CCP4i, and type of errors)? I am in the midst of reorganizing our little Mac computer cluster, and CCP4 with CCP4i installs nicely on OS 10.6.8 and 10.7.1. However, there were some permissions that need resetting to allow you to fire up

Re: [ccp4bb] Why Does Cross-linking Mean Anything?

2011-09-16 Thread R. M. Garavito
Jacob, One of the problems with glutaraldehyde is the its chemistry is so bizarre. It actually forms quite long transient polymers in solution. You also have to ask yourself why formaldehyde also "fixes" tissues. This is why glutaraldehyde works so well for tissue fixation for EM as op

Re: [ccp4bb] Protein elution in Size Exclusion

2011-08-29 Thread R. M. Garavito
Nian, Before you dump the column, clean it and run some protein standards on it. If everything looks OK, run a small sample of your protein again. If it behaves the same way, then you may have a protein with hydrophobic patches. Anomalous binding to and elution from polymeric SEC media

Re: [ccp4bb] Aging PEGs

2011-08-25 Thread R. M. Garavito
Time to start digging in the archives. Try looking at work by Fran Jurnak in 1986 (J. Cryst. Growth 76, 577) and Bill Ray's work in 1985 (Analytical Biochem 146, 307), and then the works that cite them. I thought this was common knowledge, but I guess it goes in phases. Aging of poly(olig

Re: [ccp4bb] recommendation for ammonium dihydrogen phosphate cryo

2011-05-26 Thread R. M. Garavito
Chris, As others have said, using sugars as cryoprotectants is a good first choice. However, we have run into problems freezing crystals with sugars when the primarily crystallization reagent is a salt at high concentrations (0.8-2M). Although 0.4M ammonium phosphate, is not particularl

Re: [ccp4bb] crystal bent once open cover slip

2011-05-24 Thread R. M. Garavito
Weikai, What you might be experiencing is a detergent effect, i.e., you are near a detergent-dependent crystallization boundary. We have been hit with this many times. Under vapor diffusion conditions, sitting or hanging drop, the protein-detergent complex crystallizes and the free/ bound

Re: [ccp4bb] Heme Proteins

2010-08-26 Thread R. M. Garavito
Dear Hari, You might look at Lucy Waskell's experiences with full length mammalian Cytochrome P450 2B4. While she got >50 mg of purified protein per liter of culture, many other heme proteins are much harder to express in E. coli with heme assembly proteins, chaperones, etc. You just ha

Re: [ccp4bb] Is it possible to mutate a reversible epimerase into an inreversible one?

2010-05-18 Thread R. M. Garavito
Vinson, As Dale and Randy pointed out, you cannot change the ΔG of a reaction by mutation: enzyme, which is a catalyst, affects only the activation barrier (ΔE "double-dagger"). You can just make it a better (or worse) catalyst which would allow the reaction to flow faster (or slower) to

Re: [ccp4bb] inexpensive source of DDM

2010-03-15 Thread R. M. Garavito
Tony, As Ed said, DDM is not, nor will ever be cheap. However, the Anatrace sol-grade is primarily for the early stages of a protein's isolation and purification, but is not recommended (or intended) for crystallization or biophysical experiments. Use their purer grade for the latter.