Rigaku has a page of common crystallization recipes:
http://www.rigaku.com/protein/crystallization.html

Try the "Lysozyme crystallization procedure for low temp use" recipe. It
contains ethylene glycol so the crystals are cryo-ready. To get a large
number of smaller crystals, push the concentration of lysozyme solution
up to 100 - 120 mg/ml.

Cheers,

-  
=======================================================================
With the single exception of Cornell, there is not a college in the
United States where truth has ever been a welcome guest - R.G. Ingersoll
=======================================================================
                              David J. Schuller
                              modern man in a post-modern world
                              MacCHESS, Cornell University
                              [EMAIL PROTECTED]



On Thu, 2008-07-03 at 18:08 -0500, Jacob Keller wrote:
> Dear Crystallogrphers,
> 
> does anybody here know a protocol to get consistently well-diffracting but 
> smaller, ~50um, cryoprotect(ed/able) lysozyme crystals?
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Jacob Keller
> 
> *******************************************
> Jacob Pearson Keller
> Northwestern University
> Medical Scientist Training Program
> Dallos Laboratory
> F. Searle 1-240
> 2240 Campus Drive
> Evanston IL 60208
> lab: 847.491.2438
> cel: 773.608.9185
> email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> *******************************************
> 
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Ailong Ke" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>
> Sent: Thursday, July 03, 2008 4:13 PM
> Subject: [ccp4bb] air bubbles in the Bio-Rad Duoflow system
> 
> 
> > Hello All,
> >
> > I own a Bio-Rad Duoflow system for almost a year. The machine lived up to 
> > some of the recommendations I saw on this board. However, there is this 
> > annoying problem with air bubbles entering columns and I cannot figure out 
> > the source. The system would be free of any air bubbles in the beginning, 
> > and performs fine when water is loaded using needle/syringe into the 5ml 
> > superloop and then injected into the column. When protein samples are 
> > injected the same way, a lot of air bubbles would appear and get trapped 
> > inside the ion exchange column, leaving yellowish marks on the Uno columns 
> > and eventually reducing their performance. I've been a FLC/AKTA user for 
> > about ten years and have never seen such problems. I doubt it is due to a 
> > faulty injection valve because we recently had it replaced for other 
> > reasons. We did move a backpressure generator (a little black piece) from 
> > post-column position to before-column, otherwise we cannot run sizing 
> > columns in a reasonable flow rate.
> >
> > I'd like to hear if you have similar experiences and how you fixed the 
> > problem. Thanks a lot!
> >
> > Ailong
> >
> > -- 
> > 

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