posted on 2020-05-13, 17:09authored byVirginia Apostolopoulou, Niels Junius, Richard P. Sear, Monika Budayova-Spano
Growing
a protein crystal starts by mixing a solution of the protein,
with a solution of a precipitantsuch as a salt or poly(ethylene
glycol) (PEG). Mixing two solutions is a surprisingly complex process,
but this complexity has not received much attention by those crystallizing
proteins, despite crystallization being notoriously sensitive to solution
conditions. We combine experimental data with modeling to improve
our ability to predict mixing time scales for conditions typical of
protein crystallization. We look at the effects of convection and
of diffusion through semipermeable membranes. Our experiments are
with dialysis chambers, where the crystallization chamber is separated
from a precipitant reservoir by a semipermeable membrane. This membrane
slows mixing down by factors that vary from ten, for smaller PEG and
salts, to a hundred, for dilute larger PEG. This agrees with our model
prediction that for larger polymers diffusion through the membrane
is sensitive to both molecular weight and concentration. Both salt
and PEG solutions are denser than dilute protein solutions, and this
drives convection, which accelerates mixing. Convection is flow due
to gravity acting on mass density differences. We show how to determine
when convection occurs and how to estimate its effect on mixing times.