And the Molecular Dimension s 3D screen.

Tony Savill
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From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Debanu Das
Sent: 12 July 2017 22:38
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] crystallization optimization

Yes, we have done this (addition of water to dilute screen reagents in the 
well) and also try it now in some cases and in fact, this is also the rationale 
behind Hampton's Crystal Screen Lite.
Best,
Debanu
--
Debanu Das

On Jul 12, 2017, at 9:01 AM, Alun R Coker 
<alun.co...@ucl.ac.uk<mailto:alun.co...@ucl.ac.uk>> wrote:

So, if we have a commercial 96 well screen where more than around 60% of the 
drops precipitate. It may be worth diluting the whole screen say (30ul screen 
and 20ul water in each well) and repeating ..... rather than diluting the 
protein.

Has anyone ever tried this?

All the best,

Alun

On 12/07/17 16:54, Frank von Delft wrote:

Yes, exactly.  Thanks for doing the Right Thing and posting the actual diagram.


On 12/07/2017 16:26, Patrick Shaw Stewart wrote:

Alun

I agree Frank's point is very interesting - and he intriguingly refers us to 
the phase diagram.

Is the point that Line A is longer than Line B ?

Best wishes

Patrick











On 12 July 2017 at 14:40, Alun R Coker 
<alun.co...@ucl.ac.uk<mailto:alun.co...@ucl.ac.uk>> wrote:


Hi Everyone,

Franks point is really interesting. We routinely reduce the protein 
concentration when we see too many precipitated wells, but we never dilute the 
screen. Has anyone tried this?

All the best,

Alun

On 12/07/17 08:48, Frank von Delft wrote:

The point I was failing to make:  reducing either protein or precipitant 
concentration will indeed reduce nucleation, but often won't get you bigger or 
more single crystals:  it will just make the appearance of crystals less 
reliable.

The way to get big single reliable crystals is to increase protein and greatly 
reduce precipitant.

(Even better:  do seeding.  Like Vicky said.  Incredible how often people don't 
bother to do seeding, yet it solves so many problems.)

phx


On 12/07/2017 07:50, Vicky Tsirkone wrote:
Dear Frank,

I may see in the attached pic several nucleation points and a considerable 
amount of microcrystals. Based to my knowledge decreasing the concentration of 
the precipitant and/or the protein concentration would be a reasonable approach 
to refine the initial hits.
By checking the diagram as you correctly mentioned you may see that the fine 
tuning of protein and precipitant concetration may lead to the desirable result 
without reaching the precipitation zone.

Patrick just check your screens. Just a rule of thumb, if you see precipitation 
in the ~60% of your drops then you should definitely reduce the protein 
concentration.

ps dont forget to try the streak seeding, as well.

Have a nice day and again good luck.

Vicky

On Wed, Jul 12, 2017 at 8:50 AM, Frank von Delft 
<frank.vonde...@sgc.ox.ac.uk<mailto:frank.vonde...@sgc.ox.ac.uk>> wrote:


Actually, you should try increasing the protein concentration - a lot.  But be 
prepared to drop the precipitant concentration to almost nothing (1 or 2% isn't 
"low").

To understand why, look at the phase diagram and what we assume about vapour 
diffusion.  (Which I'm assuming is what you're doing.)


On 12/07/2017 06:28, Vicky Tsirkone wrote:
Dear Patrick,

You may reduce the protein concentation, as well.
Another option could be the streak seeding by exploiting the drop of your 
initial condition.

Good luck,

V.T.

On Mon, Jul 10, 2017 at 7:17 PM, Patrick Shaw Stewart 
<patr...@douglas.co.uk<mailto:patr...@douglas.co.uk>> wrote:


Microseed them into two or three random screens.

Search for MMS and rMMS online.

Good luck

Patrick




On 10 July 2017 at 15:47, Liuqing Chen 
<519198...@163.com<mailto:519198...@163.com>> wrote:

hello everyone!
I get a condition (10% w/v PEG 6000, 100mm HEPES PH7.0) in which my protein 
grow small  needle like crystals, how can i optimize it to get bigger crystals? 
 the attach is the crystals  figure.
thanks in advance
sincerely
Liuqing Chen



--
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Web: www.ucl.ac.uk/pxmed<http://www.ucl.ac.uk/pxmed>



--
 patr...@douglas.co.uk<mailto:patr...@douglas.co.uk>    Douglas Instruments Ltd.
 Douglas House, East Garston, Hungerford, Berkshire, RG17 7HD, UK
 Directors: Peter Baldock, Patrick Shaw Stewart

 http://www.douglas.co.uk
 Tel: 44 (0) 148-864-9090<tel:01488%20649090>    US toll-free 1-877-225-2034
 Regd. England 2177994, VAT Reg. GB 480 7371 36




--

Dr Alun R. Coker

Senior Lecturer

Wolfson Institute for Biomedical Research

University College London

The Cruciform Building

London

WC1E 6BT



Tel: 020 7679 6703 Ext 46703

Web: www.ucl.ac.uk/pxmed<http://www.ucl.ac.uk/pxmed>

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