In my case what simply worked is to put your solution with 40% glycerol on the
side of the drop and wait for crystals to stop dancing. Fish them out swiping
through the side were you have put your solution. Or I have used MPD as
cryoprotectant and freeze them in cold room (4C) its amazing what c
Ahh, yes, the "dancing crystals problem". The good news is alcohols are
really good cryoprotectants as well as excellent precipitants. Shame
their use has fallen out of favor over the years, but I guess as drop
sizes got smaller the evaporation problems got worse and worse.
In my humble opi
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> Am 15.08.2018 um 08:05 schrieb Kajander, Tommi A:
> > Yes sorry, i meant paratone-N also.
> >
> > Tommi
> >
, i meant paratone-N also.
Tommi
Kohteesta: ferrer
Lähetetty: keskiviikko 15. elokuuta klo 0.41
Aihe: Re: [ccp4bb] Fishing crystals from volatile solvent as precipitant
Vastaanottaja: ccp4bb@jiscmail.ac.uk
Dear Thomas,
Alternatively you can try shooting on crystals in the drop, in situ. So
Yes sorry, i meant paratone-N also.
Tommi
Kohteesta: ferrer
Lähetetty: keskiviikko 15. elokuuta klo 0.41
Aihe: Re: [ccp4bb] Fishing crystals from volatile solvent as precipitant
Vastaanottaja: ccp4bb@jiscmail.ac.uk
Dear Thomas,
Alternatively you can try shooting on crystals in the drop, in
Dear Thomas,
Alternatively you can try shooting on crystals in the drop, in situ. So
fishing, no cryo. But potentially high radiation damage. Can be
considered if you have enough crystals, and if your crystallization
plate makes it possible.
Regards
JL
On 14/08/2018 20:58, Thomas Krey wrot
I just give an example of oil. Indeed, paraffin is also a very good option.
In some cases (<=5% alcohol). Here is the difference I observed between
paraffin and paratone oil.
1. Paraffin oil has low viscosity. Paratone oil is too sticky with high
viscosity. Sometimes, I mix them with different rat
I second (third?) what Tommi and Kevin said about using an oil to cover the
drop to slow evaporation (I like paraffin for this—not too viscous). Here’s an
additional nuance: Saturate the oil with the alcohol first, before using it to
cover the drop.
> On 14 Aug 2018, at 2:58 PM, Thomas Krey w
Hi Thomas,
This is usual when high volatile solvent is used in crystallization
(membrane or glycoproteins). The crystal may looks very nice with sharp
edges. When you open the cover glass, you may see a very thin film formed
on the hang-on drops. Once you touch the drop, then crystals move very
qu
Hi,
you could try picking in the cold room. Provided the temperature change does
not kill the crystals, this sometimes worked fine for me in similar cases.
Petri
Petri Kursula
--
Professor
Department of Biomedicine
University of Bergen, Norway
http://www.uib.no/en/rg/petrikursula
>
Subject: [ccp4bb] Fishing crystals from volatile solvent as precipitant
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Dear crystallization exper
@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: [ccp4bb] Fishing crystals from volatile solvent as precipitant
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Dear
Dear crystallization experts,
We have 3D protein crystals grown from a microseed matrix screening vapor
diffusion experiment in either
15% (v/v) Reagent alcohol
HEPES Na pH 7.5
0.2 M MgCl2
or in
27% Isopropanol
0.18 M MgCl2
90 mM HEPES Na pH 7.5
10% Glycerol
Upon opening the corresponding wel
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