If you need phases, you might change the salt ion(s) to something with 
significant anomalous signal, i.e., Rb+, Cs+, Br-, I- instead of Na+ and Cl-. 
With such high ion concentrations, you should get some really high-occupancy 
sites. In any case it is sometimes handy to have experimental phases if things 
don’t go the way you thought with MR.

JPK


From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Katherine 
Sippel
Sent: Friday, February 21, 2014 11:48 AM
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] High Salt Cryo

I want to start off by thanking everyone. The replies, both on- and off-board, 
were speedy and numerous. I apologize for the delay in expressing my gratitude; 
I was implementing your wonderful suggestions. I have put together a summary 
for the archive.

To recap, I was looking for suggestions to cryoprotect crystals from >3 M NaCl 
crystallization conditions excluding ethylene glycol or PEG completely and 
avoiding glycerol and sucrose due to apparent crystal instability.

-Several people confirmed that 4 M NaCl should be sufficient.

-There were several suggestions for cryosalts with malonate and formate being 
the most frequent. Lithium salts were also put on the table including partial 
or complete substitution of NaCl with LiCl, both as a soak or a crystallization 
solution.

-As an end run around the apparent glycerol instability, stepwise transfers and 
quick dips with glycerol were suggested. Glycerol supplemented with xylitol was 
also thrown into the mix.

-There was one tale of sucrose being successfully added into a crystallization 
condition when direct soaks were unsuccessful

-There were several confirmations regarding the success of Paratone and 
Paraffin oil with pro-tip of dehydrating the paraffin oil in a speed-vac 
overnight.

-Additional suggestions included 50-75% saturated sugars and 6.5 M proline.

Since I’m a good scientist I will include the reference section. I found it 
very useful.

-Cryosalts: suppression of ice formation in macromolecular crystallography. K. 
A. Rubinson et al, Acta Cryst. (2000). D56, 996-1001

-Malonate: a versatile cryoprotectant and stabilizing solution for salt-grown 
macromolecular crystals. T. Holyoak et. al.  Acta Cryst. (2003). D59, 2356-2358

-Proline: Mother Nature's cryoprotectant applied to protein crystallography. 
T.A. Pemberton et. al. Acta Cryst. (2012) D68, 1010-8.

-Effects of cryoprotectant concentration and cooling rate on vitrification of 
aqueous solutions. V. Berejnov et.al<http://et.al>. J. Appl. Cryst. (2006) 39, 
244-251

-A comparison of salts for the crystallization of macromolecules. A. McPherson. 
Protein Sci. (2001) 10, 418-22

-Strategies for protein cryocrystallography. L. Vera, E. A. Stura. Crystal 
Growth & Design (2013) 14(2), 427-435

Thank you all again. I really appreciate your time and energy.

Cheers,
Katherine



On Wed, Feb 19, 2014 at 9:23 AM, Enrico Stura 
<est...@cea.fr<mailto:est...@cea.fr>> wrote:
Dear All,

I would like to point out that the conditions 1.8 - 2.0 M NaCl are not 
considered High Salt as
NaCl is soluble to 5M and a 2X solution (i.e. 4M NaCl) is possible. Also NaCl 
contrary to
ammonium sulfate, citrate, phosphate, etc. is compatible with polyethylene 
glycol without phase
separation problems.

This means that with 1.8 - 2.0 M NaCl you have an vast repertoire of possible 
ways
to cryo-protect crystals and with the vast repertoire you gain a good 
possibility of finding
conditions that enhance diffraction:
see:
Vera, L., Stura, E. A. (2013) Strategies for protein cryocrystallography. 
Crystal Growth & Design,
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/cg301531f

For me the definition for "High Salt" is that 2X for the precipitant component 
is not possible.

Enrico.

On Wed, 19 Feb 2014 16:06:27 +0100, Karolina Michalska 
<dzi...@amu.edu.pl<mailto:dzi...@amu.edu.pl>> wrote:


4M NaCl should work too. It worked for the conditions with 1.8 - 2.0 M
NaCl.

Karolina

W dniu 2014-02-19 06:38, Mooers, Blaine H.M. (HSC) napisał(a):
For crystals grown out of a 2 uL drop of 1.2-1.8 M LiSO4 or 1.6-2.4 M AmmSO4, 
we do in situ cryoprotection with sodium malonate. We add 2-4 uL of 1.9 M Na 
malonate to the crystallization drop, wait 10 seconds and add 2-4 uL of 2.4 M 
sodium malonate, repeat with 2.8 M and then 3.4 M. We do not bother withdrawing 
aliquots to maintain a fixed volume. You may need to tweak the volumes to 
optimize the resulting diffraction. You can also break the additions at given 
concentration into smaller aliquots to reduce the osmotic shock. This approach 
is much gentler than transferring the crystal directly to 3 M sodium malonate. 
Do not leave the drop exposed to the air for more than 3 minutes or so because 
salt crystals will start to grow. When there are multiple crystals in a drop, 
often the unused crystals in the very high salt solution will still diffract 
well up to a year later if the crystallization chamber is resealed well; their 
diffraction might even improve with the prolonged exposure
to high salt.

Blaine Mooers
Assistant Professor
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
S.L. Young Biomedical Research Center Rm. 466

Shipping address:
975 NE 10th Street, BRC 466
Oklahoma City, OK 73104-5419

Letter address:
P.O. Box 26901, BRC 466
Oklahoma City, OK 73190

office: (405) 271-8300<tel:%28405%29%20271-8300> lab: (405) 
271-8313<tel:%28405%29%20271-8313> fax: (405) 271-3910<tel:%28405%29%20271-3910>
e-mail: blaine-moo...@ouhsc.edu<mailto:blaine-moo...@ouhsc.edu>
Faculty webpage: 
http://www.oumedicine.com/department-of-biochemistry-and-molecular-biology/faculty/blaine-mooers-ph-d-
 [1]

X-ray lab webpage: 
http://www.oumedicine.com/department-of-biochemistry-and-molecular-biology/department-facilities/macromolecular-crystallography-laboratory
 [2]

Small Angle Scattering webpage: 
http://www.oumedicine.com/docs/default-source/ad-biochemistry-workfiles/small-angle-scattering-links.html?sfvrsn=0
 [3]

________________________________________
From: CCP4 bulletin board [CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK<mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>] 
On Behalf Of Katherine Sippel 
[katherine.sip...@gmail.com<mailto:katherine.sip...@gmail.com>]
Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2014 12:08 PM
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK<mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>
Subject: [ccp4bb] High Salt Cryo

Hi all,

I'm looking for a cryo condition for high NaCl (3+ M) crystallization 
condition. I would do it the proper way, but our beam/cryostream is down.

I've tried a bunch of things at the moment. Ethylene glycol and PEG 400 nuke 
the crystals immediately even at low concentrations. Prolonged exposure to 
glycerol and sucrose starts to break them down so I'm thinking that the 
diffraction will probably suffer. I can't find any reports of NaCl's viability 
as a cryosalt. I've got Paratone/Paraffin oil/Mitegen's LV cryo oil on tap but 
I was hoping to not put all my eggs in one basket.
I tried the ISRDB database through 
archive.com<http://archive.com><https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v1/url?u=http://archive.com&k=7DHVT22D9IhC0F3WohFMBA%3D%3D%0A&r=ftLbjJYpc5s5JQz9Q6qd7uT7FxPLb4V0aIwH4RJhyZU%3D%0A&m=Vjr4m%2Fds%2FdLGOVQoQ0x8PApF%2FzyGkSwsbIoq92CSnOk%3D%0A&s=3cfbf18821b5b59934971bf583cf3dd6e2ded91923c614e670857e10916c687e
 [4]> without any luck (no search function). I've gone to the PDB searching for 
similar crystallization conditions and looked up the papers for their cryos, 
but they are all glycerol. Google gives me the same.


I thought I'd see if anyone on the bb has an anecdotal "this worked for us" 
story. I would love to hear it.

Thank you for your time,
Katherine

--
"Nil illegitimo carborundum" - Didactylos


Links:
------
[1]
http://www.oumedicine.com/department-of-biochemistry-and-molecular-biology/faculty/blaine-mooers-ph-d-
[2]
http://www.oumedicine.com/department-of-biochemistry-and-molecular-biology/department-facilities/macromolecular-crystallography-laboratory
[3]
http://www.oumedicine.com/docs/default-source/ad-biochemistry-workfiles/small-angle-scattering-links.html?sfvrsn=0
[4]
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v1/url?u=http://archive.com&amp;k=7DHVT22D9IhC0F3WohFMBA%3D%3D%0A&amp;r=ftLbjJYpc5s5JQz9Q6qd7uT7FxPLb4V0aIwH4RJhyZU%3D%0A&amp;m=Vjr4m%2Fds%2FdLGOVQoQ0x8PApF%2FzyGkSwsbIoq92CSnOk%3D%0A&amp;s=3cfbf18821b5b59934971bf583cf3dd6e2ded91923c614e670857e10916c687e<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v1/url?u=http://archive.com&k=7DHVT22D9IhC0F3WohFMBA%3D%3D%0A&r=ftLbjJYpc5s5JQz9Q6qd7uT7FxPLb4V0aIwH4RJhyZU%3D%0A&m=Vjr4m%2Fds%2FdLGOVQoQ0x8PApF%2FzyGkSwsbIoq92CSnOk%3D%0A&s=3cfbf18821b5b59934971bf583cf3dd6e2ded91923c614e670857e10916c687e>


--
Enrico A. Stura D.Phil. (Oxon) ,    Tel: 33 (0)1 69 08 4302 Office
Room 19, Bat.152,                         Tel: 33 (0)1 69 08 9449    Lab
http://www-dsv.cea.fr/ibitecs/simopro/ltmb/cristallogenese
LTMB, SIMOPRO, IBiTec-S, CE Saclay, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette,   FRANCE
http://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=en&user=Kvm06WIoPAsC&pagesize=100&sortby=pubdate
http://www.chem.gla.ac.uk/protein/mirror/stura/index2.html
e-mail: est...@cea.fr<mailto:est...@cea.fr>                             Fax: 33 
(0)1 69 08 90 71



--
"Nil illegitimo carborundum" - Didactylos

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