W0267
Crystal Growth Rate Dispersion: A Predictor of Crystal
Quality in Microgravity? Richard D. Kephart1, Russell A.
Judge1, Edward H. Snell2, and Mark J. van der
Woerd2, 1Univ. of Alabama in Huntsville, NASA/MSFC, SD46,
Huntsville, AL 35812, 2Universities Space Research Association,
NASA/MSFC, SD46, Huntsville, AL 35812.
In theory macromolecular crystals grow through a process
involving at least two transport phenomena of solute to the crystal surface:
diffusion and convection. In absence of standard gravitational forces, the ratio
of these two phenomena can change and explain why crystal growth in microgravity
is different from that on Earth. Experimental evidence clearly shows, however,
that crystal growth of various systems is not equally sensitive to reduction in
gravitational forces, leading to quality improvement in microgravity for some
crystals but not for others. We hypothesize that the differences in final
crystal quality are related to crystal growth rate dispersion. If growth rate
dispersion exists on Earth, decreases in microgravity, and coincides with
crystal quality improvements then this dispersion is a predictor for crystal
quality improvement. In order to test this hypothesis, we will measure growth
rate dispersion both in microgravity and on Earth and will correlate the data
with previously established data on crystal quality differences for the two
environments. We present here the first crystal growth rate measurement data for
three proteins (lysozyme, xylose isomerase and human recombinant insulin),
collected on Earth, using hardware identical to the hardware to be used in
microgravity and show how these data correlate with crystal quality improvements
established in microgravity.