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- 2011 Annual Meeting
- Separations Division
- Crystallization of Pharmaceutical and Biological Molecules I
- (20f) Microfluidic Platforms for In Situ Crystallographic Analysis
Microfluidics offers exquisite control over transport phenomena, which provides precise control over composition and kinetics of a crystallization experiment than what is possible at the macroscale (2). However, to take advantage of these benefits, it is necessary to couple complex fluid handling capabilities with the ability to perform on-chip crystallographic analysis.
The multilayer microfluidic crystallization platforms described here fabricated out of X-ray transparent materials which allow in situ analysis and can be used for high throughput experiments. Our 96-well screening and optimization chips can screen eight different protein-to-precipitant ratios for twelve different precipitant conditions using less than 2µL of protein. A suitable condition once identified, can be scaled out in an array format to reproducibly grow a large number of crystals.
We are currently working on extending the present chip architecture, which has been validated for in situ screening, to perform time resolved studies on protein dynamics. Laue crystallography is a technique which is used to perform time resolved studies on protein dynamics and we have validated our chip architecture for Laue diffraction. Here we aim to couple in situ analysis of a large number of crystals with the capabilities of a microfluidic flow cell to enable the controlled introduction of various chemical stimuli and thus trigger biologically relevant conformational changes in the structure which can then be analyzed in situ in our microfluidic chips.
References:
1. Stevens RC (2000) High-throughput protein crystallization. Current Opinion in Structural Biology 10(5):558-563.
2. Zheng B, Tice JD, Roach LS, & Ismagilov RF (2004) A droplet-based, composite PDMS/glass capillary microfluidic system for evaluating protein crystallization conditions by microbatch and vapor-diffusion methods with on-chip X-ray diffraction. Angewandte Chemie-International Edition 43(19):2508-2511.