TITLE: "Extracting trends from two decades of microgravity macromolecular 
crystallization history" (2005) (Judge, Snell and van der Woerd). 

"Significant enhancements in structural knowledge have resulted from X-ray 
diffraction of the crystals grown . . . in the reduced acceleration 
environnments of an orbiting spacecraft."


TITLE: "Macromolecular Crystallization in Microgravity Generated by a 
Superconducting Magnet" (2006) (Wakayama, Yin, Harata, Kiyoshi, Fujiwara and 
Tanimoto). 

"About 30% of the protein crystals grown in space yield better X-ray 
diffraction data than the best crystals grown on the earth."


TITLE: "The crystallization of biological macromolecules under microgravity: a 
way to more accurate three-dimensional structures?" (2002) (Lorber). 

"The crystallization of proteins . . . in a microgravity environment can 
produce crystals having lesser defects than crystals prepared under normal 
gravity on earth. Such microgravity-grown crystals can diffract X-rays to a 
higher resolution and have a lower mosaic spread."


TITLE: "Protein crystal growth on board Shenzhou 3: a concerted effort improves 
crystal diffraction quality and facilitates structure determination." (2004) 
(Han, Cang, Zhou, Wang, Bi, Colelesage, Delbaere, Nahoum, Shi, Zhou, Zhue and 
Lin) 

". . . careful and concerted planning at all stages made it possible to obtain 
crystals of improved quality compared to their ground controls for some of the 
proteins. Significantly improved resolutions were obtained from diffracted 
crystals of 4 proteins. A complete data set from a space crystal of the PEP 
carboxykinase yielded significantly higher resolution, and a lower average 
temperature factor than the best ground-based control crystal."


TITLE: "JAXA-GCF project - High-quality protein crystals grown under 
microgravity environment for better understand of protein structure." (2006). 
(Sato, Tanaka, Inaka, Shinozaki, Yamanaka, Takahashi, Yamanaka, Hirota, 
Sugiyama, Kato, Saito, Sano, Motohara, Nakamura, Kobayashi, and Yoshitomi.) 

"JAXA has developed technologies for growing, in microgravity, high-quality 
protein crystals, which may diffract up to atomic resolution, for a better 
understanding of 3-dimensional rpotein structures through X-ray diffraction 
experiments."


TITLE: "A Comparison between Simulations and Experiments for Microgravity 
Crystal Growth in Gradient Magnetic Fields." (2008). (Poodt, et al.). 

"Microgravity protein crystal growth is expected to lead to an improvement of 
protein crystal quality, compared to crystals grown under normal gravity, due 
to the suppression of buoyancy driven convection. This is highly relevant, 
because for protein structure determination by X-ray diffraction, protein 
crystallization is often the quality limiting step."


TITLE: "Macromolecular crystallization in microgravity." (2005) (Snell and 
Helliwell).

"Density difference fluid flows and sedimentation of growing crystals are 
greatly reduced when crystallization takes place in a reduced gravity 
environment."


TITLE: "Comparison of space- and ground-grown Bi2Se.21Te2.79 thermoelectric 
crystals." (2010). (Zhou, et al.) 

"The compositions of the space crystal grown along growth direction were more 
homogeneous than that of the ground crystal grown. The crystallization of space 
crystal grown was obviously improved."


That's just a handful of quotes from a few of the sources I have accumulated 
over the last few months. I guess this all boils down to your definition of 
"significantly improved crystals."

Is there something wrong with these sources? Am I misunderstanding their 
findings?

Jack


--- On Sun, 5/9/10, Dunten, Pete W. <p...@slac.stanford.edu> wrote:


> "significantly improved crystals " I
> wasn't aware that was an accepted generalization, born out
> by the experiments already conducted.
> Can you cite a number of cases?
> 
> Another issue for pharma would be the timeline. 
> Chemistry programs move pretty fast, and if the xray
> crystallographers don't keep up,
> they aren't very useful.
> 
> Pete
> ________________________________________
> From: CCP4 bulletin board [ccp...@jiscmail.ac.uk]
> On Behalf Of Jack Reynolds [jdr7...@yahoo.com]
> Sent: Sunday, May 09, 2010 11:26 AM
> To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
> Subject: [ccp4bb] Clarification and another question . . .
> 
> --- On Sun, 5/9/10, Klaus Fütterer <k.futte...@bham.ac.uk>
> wrote:
> 
> > Dear Jack,
> >
> > I believe your venture would enter a mature market,
> and, if
> > you were to offer growing growing crystals in
> microgravity,
> > a market characterised by very high costs and
> (presumably)
> > very low margins.
> 
> I wouldn't offer crystal growth, I would offer access to
> the data from x-ray diffraction of space-grown crystals. Is
> the data from significantly improved crystals not a valuable
> commodity?
> 
> If the pharmaceutical industry (and other researchers, for
> that matter) could grow crystals in space, and extract
> critical data from the x-ray diffraction of these
> space-grown crystals (in space); AND
> 
> if costs could be reduced by 30-50%; AND
> 
> if the end-product is the data, not the crystals . . .
> 
> do you still think (profit) margins would be nominal?
> 
> Is your assessment of "very low margins" based on assumed
> "very high costs?"
> 
> Jack
>

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