학술논문

Protein Crystal Growth in Microgravity
Document Type
article
Source
Science. 246(4930)
Subject
Animals
Crystallization
Interferon-gamma
Isocitrate Lyase
Pancreatic Elastase
Proteins
Space Flight
Swine
Weightlessness
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
The crystals of most proteins or other biological macromolecules are poorly ordered and diffract to lower resolutions than those observed for most crystals of simple organic and inorganic compounds. Crystallization in the microgravity environment of space may improve crystal quality by eliminating convection effects near growing crystal surfaces. A series of 11 different protein crystal growth experiments was performed on U.S. space shuttle flight STS-26 in September 1988. The microgravity-grown crystals of gamma-interferon D1, porcine elastase, and isocitrate lyase are larger, display more uniform morphologies, and yield diffraction data to significantly higher resolutions than the best crystals of these proteins grown on Earth.