Dear all,

Sorry for the non-CCP4 question. I think this is an old story but our knowledge 
to deal with it is very limited. So any suggestions will be greatly appreciated.

We have crystallized a 21KD protein with 2 disulfide bonds grown for one month 
in 0.1M tri-sodium citrate pH 5.6, 0.5M (NH4)2SO4 and 1M Li2SO4. The crystals 
look big (~0.4mm x 0.4mm x 0.3mm) and pretty (sharp edge, clean surface) but 
diffracted to only 4A in-house. The spots are quite strong and isotropic at low 
resolution but decay sharply beyond 5-6A. The crystal belongs to P4 pointgroup 
(P422 is also possible) with cell parameters of 127.6, 127.6, 162.5, 90, 90, 
90. The solutions we can think of to elevate its diffraction ability are as 
follows:

1)      Try synchrotron radiation
2)      Try a lot of similar crystals and hope one of them diffracts better 
than others
3)      Let the crystals grow for a longer time and hope it could pack more 
“orderly”
4)      Additive screen based on the original condition
5)      Check the original plates for other crystallizing conditions 
(unfortunately until now this is the only one out of ~300)
6)      Screen with other forms of the protein, i.e., N/C-terminus truncated 
ones, complexed with its ligands etc.

I believe many protein crystallographers have encountered similar problems, are 
there any successful stories from these fancy poor crystals? Any suggestions or 
references will be highly appreciated.

Thanks in advance!

Tiancen Hu
Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica
Rm. 2107, #555, ZuChongzhi Rd.
Shanghai 201203
P.R. China
Tel: +86-21-50806600 ext 2107
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to