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Growth rates of protein crystals.


ABSTRACT: Protein crystallization is important for structural biology. The rate at which a protein crystallizes is often the bottleneck in determining the protein's structure. Here, we give a physical model for the growth rates of protein crystals. Most materials crystallize faster under stronger growth conditions; however, protein crystallization slows down under the strongest conditions. Proteins require a crystallization slot of 'just right' conditions. Our model provides an explanation. Unlike simpler materials, proteins are orientationally asymmetrical. Under strong conditions, protein molecules attempt to crystallize too quickly, in wrong orientations, blocking surface sites for more productive crystal growth. The model explains the observation that increasing the net charge on a protein increases the crystal growth rate. The model predictions are in good agreement with experiments on the growth rates of tetragonal lysozyme crystals as a function of pH, salt concentration, temperature, and protein concentration.

SUBMITTER: Schmit JD 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3311159 | biostudies-literature | 2012 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Growth rates of protein crystals.

Schmit Jeremy D JD   Dill Ken K  

Journal of the American Chemical Society 20120223 9


Protein crystallization is important for structural biology. The rate at which a protein crystallizes is often the bottleneck in determining the protein's structure. Here, we give a physical model for the growth rates of protein crystals. Most materials crystallize faster under stronger growth conditions; however, protein crystallization slows down under the strongest conditions. Proteins require a crystallization slot of 'just right' conditions. Our model provides an explanation. Unlike simpler  ...[more]

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2006-03-08 | GSE4366 | GEO