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Graphene‐Based Nucleants for Protein Crystallization
Author(s) -
Govada Lata,
Rubio Noelia,
Saridakis Emmanuel,
Balaskandan Kalpana,
Leese Hannah S.,
Li Yanmin,
Wang Beijia,
Shaffer Milo S. P.,
Chayen Naomi
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.202202596
Subject(s) - materials science , crystallization , polyethylene glycol , peg ratio , graphene , chemical engineering , nanotechnology , protein crystallization , process engineering , finance , engineering , economics
Protein crystallization remains a major bottleneck for the determination of high resolution structures. Nucleants can accelerate the process but should ideally be compatible with high throughput robotic screening. Polyethylene glycol grafted (PEGylated) graphenes can be stabilized in water providing dispensable, nucleant systems. Two graphitic feedstocks are exfoliated and functionalized with PEG using a non‐destructive, scalable, chemical reduction method, delivering good water dispersibility (80 and 750 µg mL −1 for large and small layers, respectively). The wide utility of these nucleants has been established across five proteins and three different screens, each of 96 conditions, demonstrating greater effectiveness of the dispersed PEGylated graphenes. Smaller numbers of larger, more crystalline flakes consistently act as better protein nucleants. The delivered nucleant concentration is optimized (0.1 mg mL −1 in the condition), and the performance benchmarked against existing state of the art, molecularly imprinted polymer nucleants. Strikingly, graphene nucleants are effective even when decreasing both the nucleant and protein concentration to unusually low concentrations. The set‐up to scale‐up nucleant production to liter volumes can provide sufficient material for wide implementation. Together with the optimized crystallization conditions, the results are a step forward toward practical synthesis of a readily accessible “universal” nucleant.

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