Title: Weizmann microbatch
1Microbatch crystallisation for screening worth
a try?
2Microbatch crystallisation
- Description of the method
- Modified microbatch and the influence of
different oils - Modified microbatch compared to vapour diffusion
- Advantages and disadvantages
3Batch Crystallisation
- Batch method
- Where the conditions to produce crystals are
pre-determined, no concentration of the solution
is required large drops may be used or even on an
industrial scale. - Probably the case in most vapour diffusion
experiments
4Microbatch Crystallisation
Microbatch method Using small volumes of
protein(1ul) and precipitating agent under a
layer of paraffin oil (Chayen et. al. 1990) Used
for optimization not screening
5Microbatch Crystallisation
Automated microbatch Douglas Instruments
develops a robot for setting up crystallisation
drops under paraffin oil.(1992)
6Microbatch Crystallisation the early days
In 1994 Roche decides to use the Douglas system
for crystallisation screens Far fewer hits were
obtained than with standard hanging drop vapour
diffusion
If you buy a robot use it!!
7Microbatch Crystallisation the early days
Different oils were tested and a correlation was
found between viscosity of the oil and the rate
of crystals appearance
8Als Oil is born!!
Modified Microbatch or microbatch diffusion By
modifying the oils used a system is established
which allows concentration of the protein and
precipitating agent in the drop.
A novel approach to crystallising proteins under
oil A.DArcy, C. Elmore, M. Stihle, J.E.
Johnston Journal of Crystal Growth 1996 168
175-180
9The crystallisation experiment
Many drops remain clear
10Microbatch reaches higher concentrations
Water diffuses through the oil, the rate is
affected by the type of the oil
6ml
11Manual microbatch
A
B
C
D
Manual microbatch setup 1. Oil pipetted into
wells of 96 well plates (Figs. 4A, 4B) 2.
Reagents pipetted using 8 channel pipette 3.
Samples pipetted using single channel pipette 4.
Plates centrifuged (5 minutes, 2500 rpm) to
coalesce drops 5. Plates sealed
12Manual microbatch
As many as 40 screens or 4000 drops can be set
up in an eight hour working day. This is well
above the number of screens a normal
(non-structural genomics) lab would need to run.
However setting up a standard 96 condition screen
by hand in approximately 10 minutes is quite
attractive considering the low cost of the
equipment needed (centrifuge, and pipettes).
(R. Cudney) personal communication
13Automated microbatch
14Douglas Impax system used from 1994- 2000 at La
Roche 2000-2003 at Morphochem
Twin tube for protein ppt.agent
72 well plate
Screen solutions
15Oryx system in use at the protease platform
Novartis since 2004
- We can finally do both methods
16It makes screening simple
Microbatch
Vapour diffusion
- Reservoir solutions made every time
- Drops may dry out during pipetting
- More protein may be needed with some systems
(Cartesian) - Reservoirs and drops pipetted in 2 steps
- Plates must be sealed
- Reservoir solutions made once per 100-200
experiments - No drying out, drops covered with oil
- Very little extra protein required
- No reservoirs need to be pipetted
- No sealing required
17Other Robotic Sytems Used For Microbatch
18Different plates
- HLA Vapour batch Imp_at_ct
- Good drops, oil well contained, reservoir
included. - Poor optics with black plate
Good drops but messy
- Good drops, oil well contained, reservoir
included. - Skin formation and faster drying
19Pipetting modes Standard and Douglas
Protein is aspirated and dispensed from tube 1
Standard pipetting mode
each crystallisation reagent is aspirated and
then dispensed with protein
Protein and precipitating agent are pipetted
together
There seems to be more hits with the
simultaneous pipetting
20Oil first or last??
- It is possible to pipette the protein and
crystallising agent under a layer of pre-poured
oil - protein may not drop off tubing, static can be a
problem, may need to grease tubing, de-charge
plates Source plate) and investigator!! - It is also possible to pipette in a vapour
diffusion mode and add oil afterwards - now preferred mode
21The effect of different oils in microbatch
22Different oils give different results
- Glucose isomerase after 4 days using a 48
condition screen in microbatch -
- Paraffin oil 4 hits
- Als oil (Silicone/Paraffin) 13 hits
- Silicone oil 28 hits
23The importance of the type of oil
Twice as many hits with silicone oil
24The problem with silicone oil
Condition 1
Silicone/Paraffin
Silicone
Day 1
Day 1
The drops dry out
Day 4
Day 4
256 Days with and without reservoir
Silicone oil with reservoir
Silicone oil without reservoir
26Stabilising crystals grown under silicone oil
Average number of hits with 4 different proteins
27The oil is more important than the size of the
screen
In a recent study for a structural genomics
program paraffin oil was used in the microbatch
system to set up 1536 conditions
- Samples suitable for crystallization 22
- Success rate (on suitable samples) 36
- Our success rate is 70-80 with 48 solutions
28Other oils used
- Juvaniyama et al. Characterization,
crystallization and preliminary Xray analysis of
bifunctional dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate
synthase from Plasmodium falciparum - Used Cussons Baby oil as a substitute for Als
Oil for its lower volatility, purity, and
availability. The oil is a mixture of mineral
oil, olive oil, and vitamin E, the presence of
vitamin E might also help as oxygen scavenger - Composition of other baby oils paraffin oil,
Triticium vulgare, (wheat) Prunus
dulcis,(almonds) Perfume Isopropanol, palmate
29Small volumes dont mean small crystals
200200nl drops, aldolase with crystals at low
and high magnification (100-200um)
30Microbatch and temperature
Vapour diffusion experiments are not suitable for
temperature gradients because condensation tends
to form on the inside of the coverslide.
Drop volume will increase
Increased temperature
31Microbatch and temperature
This is not the case with microbatch at higher
temperatures the evaporation and concentration
will be accelerated
Temperature gradient experiments can be used as
an additional variable in crystallisation
screening or as an optimisation tool.
32Using temperature gradients with microbatch
Crystallisation 48 crystallisation conditions was
set up at 3 temperatures. The screens were scored
after for a period of 5 days.
4 20 Gradient
33Word of caution
- Be careful with microbatch crystallisation which
have been setup at 4 deg but need to be observed
at room temp. - Do not remove lid!!!
- Vapour from the air will condense on the oil and
eventually mix with the drops
34Microbatch and vapour diffusionis there really
a difference?
35Comparison of modified microbatch and vapour
diffusion
- Same experiment in microbatch and vapour
- diffusion drops observed on setup
36Examples of two proteins that require microbatch
crystallization
Comparison of modified microbatch and vapour
diffusion
Microbatch
Vapour Diffusion
Identical solutions used in both cases
37Screening studies comparing microbatch with
vapor diffusion
P.F.M. Baldock, V. Mills, P.D. Shaw Stewart. A
comparison of microbatch and vapour diffusion for
initial screening of crystallization conditions.
Journal of Crystal Growth. 168 (1996), pp 170-174
or http//www.douglas.co.uk/rep2.htm A. DArcy,
G.E. Dale, M. Stihle, B. DArcy. Results
reported at the 8th International Conference on
the Crystallization of Biological Macromolecules,
May 18, 2000. N. Noordeen and S. Cowan-Jacob.
Novartis Pharma AG. http//www.hamptonresearch.com
/stuff/ppt_files/P6.ppt Misuaki Sugahara, Riken
Harima Institute, SPring8. Personal
communication.
38Experiences with the use of microbatch under oil
method of crystallisation Nafeesa Noordeen and
Sandra Cowen-Jacob Novartis Basel
Total hits in microbatch 95 (paraffin/silicone)
Total hits in vapour diffusion 103
Conclusions Microbatch and vapour diffusion are
equally successful in screening for
crystallisation conditions, microbatch can be
used for volumes 200nl. Use both if you can
39Comparison of modified microbatch and vapour
diffusion
There are clearly differences between the 2
methods, do both if you can if you cant do
microbtach!
40Modified microbatch for screeningXray quality
crystals
41Microbatch and membrane protein crystallization
- There are very few reports of microbatch
crystallization of membrane proteins, it may in
fact be the system best adapted -
- A recent articles by Loll et al. 20 and
Dijkstra et al. 21 have shown that it is
possible to use detergents in the microbatch
system and - A recent chapter in "Membrane Proteins" 22 by
Naomi Chayen also gives some insights into the
use of microbatch for membrane protein
crystallization. - Examples are given of membrane proteins that
could be crystallised in the microbatch system. - If screens containing detergents are performed
under oil, the integrity of the drop is much
better preserved than in vapour diffusion
especially when plates are moved during
observation, which is another positive aspect for
screening membrane proteins for crystallization
conditions.
42Recent Developments Fluidigm
The microchip method is a nanoscale free
interface diffusion that has a number of
similarities to microbatch, as no reservoir
solutions are used and a controlled, slow
evaporation of the drops allows high protein
concentrations to be sampled. Once conditions
have been identified using the microprocessor,
the microbatch method has been shown to be very
suitable for scaling up and optimising the
initial crystals.
43Mounting from microbatch no big deal!
Remove directly from drop using a cryoloop and
flash freeze in beam, oil will act as
cryoprotectant
44Mounting from microbatch no big deal!
Remove from drop with loop place in mother
liquor on glass slide (age of drop?)
Add reservoir solution to the drop if conditions
are known
45Why was microbatch not popular?
- Crystal stability 4-8 weeks in Als oil)
- Crystal handling and mounting
- Messy
- Skin formation
- Slower pipetting
46So why is it worth a try?
- Easily automated (robot or multi-pipette).
- No sealing is required.
- Small volumes are possible with simple liquid
handling devices (0.15ul -1ul). - No reservoir solutions are needed (saves time and
money). - Suitable for temperature gradient experiments.
- Can provide a rapid screening method using
silicone oil. - Offers protection against protein oxidation and
airborne - contaminants.
- Reaches much higher concentrations of protein and
precipitants.
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