Polymer-mediated crystallisation of proteins

Proteins are the functional machines of nature and play an essential role in life. Understanding the structure and function of proteins is central to numerous areas of science and technology, including biotechnological, pharmaceutical and chemical industries. Protein crystals are an important object...

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Main Author: Zhu, Jing
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2015
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27707/
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author Zhu, Jing
author_facet Zhu, Jing
author_sort Zhu, Jing
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Proteins are the functional machines of nature and play an essential role in life. Understanding the structure and function of proteins is central to numerous areas of science and technology, including biotechnological, pharmaceutical and chemical industries. Protein crystals are an important objective for many researchers, but even though there are many examples of protein crystals reported, there are still many uncertainties in controlling the crystallisation process. In addition, while protein crystals have mostly been obtained for characterisation purposes, there are other applications where defined assemblies of proteins, either crystals or self-assembled protein nanoparticles, are desirable. These include industrial biocatalysis, therapeutic protein formulations, and even energy-harvesting systems. Accordingly, there remains a high demand for well-defined protein crystals or nanoscale aggregates. A variety of techniques have been used to produce protein crystals, the typical strategy involves the addition of nucleants surface, or surface-active materials into the crystallisation solution. Solution ‘additives’ of diverse types have proven crucial in the control of protein crystallisation. These additives can act via multiple roles in a crystallisation process, such as by enhancing intermolecular contacts between protein macromolecules, or disrupting unfavourable intermolecular association, or diminishing interactions between protein and solvent. Synthetic polymers are important additives for protein crystallisation control as there are many possible chemistries which can be introduced into the backbone and side-chains, giving a very wide range of functional behavior. However, because there are so many factors which can affect crystallisation, many of which are still poorly understood, to date only a very few classes of polymers have been studied as additives for protein crystallisation. Moreover, the mechanisms governing their interactions with protein crystals or surrounding solvent are elusive. In the study presented here, we show that polymers designed with varying degrees of charge, molecular weight and backbone structure influenced the crystallisation of three target proteins: hen-egg white lysozyme (HEWL); concanavalin A (Con A); and bovine liver catalase (BLC). Polymers were prepared as ‘additives’ into protein solution to influence the proteins crystallisation process, leading to changes in size, habit, morphology and even polymorph of the final crystals. A simple model linking polymer structure and charge to protein isoelectric point (pI) and crystallisation rate is proposed.
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spelling nottingham-277072025-02-28T11:32:09Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27707/ Polymer-mediated crystallisation of proteins Zhu, Jing Proteins are the functional machines of nature and play an essential role in life. Understanding the structure and function of proteins is central to numerous areas of science and technology, including biotechnological, pharmaceutical and chemical industries. Protein crystals are an important objective for many researchers, but even though there are many examples of protein crystals reported, there are still many uncertainties in controlling the crystallisation process. In addition, while protein crystals have mostly been obtained for characterisation purposes, there are other applications where defined assemblies of proteins, either crystals or self-assembled protein nanoparticles, are desirable. These include industrial biocatalysis, therapeutic protein formulations, and even energy-harvesting systems. Accordingly, there remains a high demand for well-defined protein crystals or nanoscale aggregates. A variety of techniques have been used to produce protein crystals, the typical strategy involves the addition of nucleants surface, or surface-active materials into the crystallisation solution. Solution ‘additives’ of diverse types have proven crucial in the control of protein crystallisation. These additives can act via multiple roles in a crystallisation process, such as by enhancing intermolecular contacts between protein macromolecules, or disrupting unfavourable intermolecular association, or diminishing interactions between protein and solvent. Synthetic polymers are important additives for protein crystallisation control as there are many possible chemistries which can be introduced into the backbone and side-chains, giving a very wide range of functional behavior. However, because there are so many factors which can affect crystallisation, many of which are still poorly understood, to date only a very few classes of polymers have been studied as additives for protein crystallisation. Moreover, the mechanisms governing their interactions with protein crystals or surrounding solvent are elusive. In the study presented here, we show that polymers designed with varying degrees of charge, molecular weight and backbone structure influenced the crystallisation of three target proteins: hen-egg white lysozyme (HEWL); concanavalin A (Con A); and bovine liver catalase (BLC). Polymers were prepared as ‘additives’ into protein solution to influence the proteins crystallisation process, leading to changes in size, habit, morphology and even polymorph of the final crystals. A simple model linking polymer structure and charge to protein isoelectric point (pI) and crystallisation rate is proposed. 2015-03-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27707/1/Jing%20Thesis%20corrected%202014-09-18.pdf Zhu, Jing (2015) Polymer-mediated crystallisation of proteins. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Zhu, Jing
Polymer-mediated crystallisation of proteins
title Polymer-mediated crystallisation of proteins
title_full Polymer-mediated crystallisation of proteins
title_fullStr Polymer-mediated crystallisation of proteins
title_full_unstemmed Polymer-mediated crystallisation of proteins
title_short Polymer-mediated crystallisation of proteins
title_sort polymer-mediated crystallisation of proteins
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27707/