Growing a single suspended perfect protein crystal in a fully noncontact manner

Zi Qing Wu, Yong Ming Liu, Qing Di Cheng, Chen Yuan Li, Ya Li Liu, Wan Yi Ge, Sven Falke, Hevila Brognaro, Jing Jie Chen, Huan Zhou, Peng Shang, Jian Hua He, Christian Betzel, Da Chuan Yin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Nucleation is a fundamental process that determines the structure, morphology, and properties of crystalline materials, and is difficult to control because it is unpredictable. Here, we demonstrate a new method to control the protein crystal nucleation using a magnetic force, where we manipulate the movement and coalescence of nucleation precursors by adding paramagnetic salt into the crystallization solution to constrain the number and position of nucleation. We found that protein nucleation could be significantly affected by the magnetic force that the gradient magnetic fields generate. When the magnetization force is sufficiently enough, nucleation can be confined to the crystallization solution with no interface contact; therefore, only one crystal nucleus appears, which results in noncontact suspension growth of a single crystal in the crystallization solution system. Under these situations, the nucleation rate significantly decreases due to the coalescence of the dense liquid phase, and the crystal growth rate also decreases due to the suppression of convection, which increases the crystal quality. Our findings provide a new method for the noncontact control of crystal nucleation and demonstrate that externally applied physical environments can be used to affect the liquid-liquid phase separation process.

Original languageEnglish
Article number136637
JournalInternational Journal of Biological Macromolecules
Volume282
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

Keywords

  • Crystallization
  • Liquid–liquid phase separation
  • Magnetic field
  • Nucleation
  • Phase coalescence

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