I once grew an oxymyoglobin crystal 1 cm long for neutron diffraction at 
Brookhaven.  I was very proud of it, but when I got to Brookhaven I was told it 
was too big for the beam (!) so I had to use a much smaller one of only 8 mm**3 
(Nature 292:81-82 (1981).  I still have a few left over that look like 5-7 mm 
long (I just held a ruler up to the tube which is still on my office shelf)

Simon E.V. Phillips
Director, Research Complex at Harwell (RCaH)
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
Harwell Oxford
Didcot
Oxon OX11 0FA
United Kingdom
Email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Direct email: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Tel:   +44 (0)1235 567701 (direct)
       +44 (0)1235 567700 (sec)
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www:   www.rc-harwell.ac.uk<http://www.rc-harwell.ac.uk/>

From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Tobias 
Beck
Sent: 24 October 2013 16:34
To: ccp4bb
Subject: [ccp4bb] largest protein crystal ever grown?

Dear all,
I was just wondering if anyone has some information or references about the 
dimensions of the largest protein crystal ever grown? I am aware that for 
neutron protein crystallography one usually needs crystals with mm dimensions. 
I have found some information on crystallization under micro-gravity and how 
this can enlarge the crystal size. However, I would rather be interested in the 
dimensions for crystals obtained from a regular lab setup.
Thanks, Tobias.

--
___________________________________________

Dr. Tobias Beck
ETH Zurich
Laboratory of Organic Chemistry
Wolfgang-Pauli-Str. 10, HCI F 322
8093 Zurich, Switzerland
phone:   +41 44 632 68 65
fax:        +41 44 632 14 86
web:      http://www.protein.ethz.ch/people/tobias
___________________________________________

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