| Literature DB >> 26843366 |
Lata Govada1, Hannah S Leese2, Emmanuel Saridakis3, Sean Kassen1, Benny Chain4, Sahir Khurshid1, Robert Menzel2, Sheng Hu2, Milo S P Shaffer2, Naomi E Chayen1.
Abstract
Controlling crystal nucleation is a crucial step in obtaining high quality protein crystals for structure determination by X-ray crystallography. Carbon nanomaterials (CNMs) including carbon nanotubes, graphene oxide, and carbon black provide a range of surface topographies, porosities and length scales; functionalisation with two different approaches, gas phase radical grafting and liquid phase reductive grafting, provide routes to a range of oligomer functionalised products. These grafted materials, combined with a range of controls, were used in a large-scale assessment of the effectiveness for protein crystal nucleation of 20 different carbon nanomaterials on five proteins. This study has allowed a direct comparison of the key characteristics of carbon-based nucleants: appropriate surface chemistry, porosity and/or roughness are required. The most effective solid system tested in this study, carbon black nanoparticles functionalised with poly(ethylene glycol) methyl ether of mean molecular weight 5000, provides a novel highly effective nucleant, that was able to induce crystal nucleation of four out of the five proteins tested at metastable conditions.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26843366 PMCID: PMC4740738 DOI: 10.1038/srep20053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1TEM images of carbon nanomaterials used:
(a) functionalised MWNTs of individualised and bundling nanotubes; (b) higher resolution image of the network formation of MWNTs; (c,d) carbon black nanoparticles functionalised with PEG forming agglomerates of nanoparticles between 1 μm and 100 nm.
Nanocarbon substrates.
| Abbr. | Carbon material | Description | BET surface area beforefunctionalisation (m2g−1) | BET surface area postfunctionalisation (m2g−1) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MWNT(A) | multi-wall carbon nanotubes | CVD grown commercial Arkema® CNTs, D approx. 10 nm and several microns in length | 220 | 180 |
| MWNT(B) | multi-wall carbon nanotubes | Injection CVD grown carbon nanotubes D approx. 100 nm and several tens of microns in length | 30 | <30 |
| GO | graphene oxide | Heavily-oxidised, hydrophilic graphene | 60 | — |
| CB | carbon black | Common form of amorphous carbon, agglomerate size 100–500 nm, average primary particle size 10 nm. | 270 | 220 |
A catalogue of as received (commercial/unmodified materials) and functionalised carbon nanomaterials tested.
agrafting methods U – ungrafted T – thermochemical R – reduction
bcalculated from polymer grafting ratio and BET measurements
csee ref. 20
dsee ref. 21
esee ref. 33
fdetermined by titration * not measured due to low solubility in water $ no IEP the material is negative across pH range
Carbon Nanomaterials (CNM) nucleation test results.
Nucleants were added to trials as small solid flakes. Key: colour indicate clear drops where no crystal growth was seen. indicates borderline conditions, namely crystals growing at the cusp of metastable and nucleation regions. represents crystals growing deep in the metastable conditions.
Figure 2Trypsin crystals grown on CNM 20 deep in the metastable zone.
Scale bar corresponds to 50 μm. The nucleant can be seen as black flakes.
Figure 3RoAb13 crystals grown on different CNMs.
(a) small crystals on CNM 16 grown at the cusp of metastable and nucleation conditions (no crystals grew in metastable conditions). (b) single crystal grown on CNM 20 deep in the metastable zone. The nucleant is seen as black flakes.