1 research outputs found
A Versatile System for High-Throughput In Situ X‑ray Screening and Data Collection of Soluble and Membrane-Protein Crystals
In recent years, in situ data collection
has been a major focus
of progress in protein crystallography. Here, we introduce the Mylar
in situ method using Mylar-based sandwich plates that are inexpensive,
easy to make and handle, and show significantly less background scattering
than other setups. A variety of cognate holders for patches of Mylar
in situ sandwich films corresponding to one or more wells makes the
method robust and versatile, allows for storage and shipping of entire
wells, and enables automated crystal imaging, screening, and goniometer-based
X-ray diffraction data-collection at room temperature and under cryogenic
conditions for soluble and membrane-protein crystals grown in or transferred
to these plates. We validated the Mylar in situ method using crystals
of the water-soluble proteins hen egg-white lysozyme and sperm whale
myoglobin as well as the 7-transmembrane protein bacteriorhodopsin
from Haloquadratum walsbyi. In conjunction
with current developments at synchrotrons, this approach promises
high-resolution structural studies of membrane proteins to become
faster and more routine