Herein is described a robotic approach to high-throughput crystallization of membrane proteins in lipidic mesophases for use in structure determination using macromolecular X-ray crystallography. Three robots capable of handling the viscous and sticky protein-laden mesophase integral to the method are introduced.
Structure-function studies of membrane proteins greatly benefit from having available high-resolution 3-D structures of the type provided through macromolecular X-ray crystallography (MX). An essential ingredient of MX is a steady supply of ideally diffraction-quality crystals. The in meso or lipidic cubic phase (LCP) method for crystallizing membrane proteins is one of several methods available for crystallizing membrane proteins. It makes use of a bicontinuous mesophase in which to grow crystals. As a method, it has had some spectacular successes of late and has attracted much attention with many research groups now interested in using it. One of the challenges associated with the method is that the hosting mesophase is extremely viscous and sticky, reminiscent of a thick toothpaste. Thus, dispensing it manually in a reproducible manner in small volumes into crystallization wells requires skill, patience and a steady hand. A protocol for doing just that was developed in the Membrane Structural & Functional Biology (MS&FB) Group1-3. JoVE video articles describing the method are available1,4.
The manual approach for setting up in meso trials has distinct advantages with specialty applications, such as crystal optimization and derivatization. It does however suffer from being a low throughput method. Here, we demonstrate a protocol for performing in meso crystallization trials robotically. A robot offers the advantages of speed, accuracy, precision, miniaturization and being able to work continuously for extended periods under what could be regarded as hostile conditions such as in the dark, in a reducing atmosphere or at low or high temperatures. An in meso robot, when used properly, can greatly improve the productivity of membrane protein structure and function research by facilitating crystallization which is one of the slow steps in the overall structure determination pipeline.
In this video article, we demonstrate the use of three commercially available robots that can dispense the viscous and sticky mesophase integral to in meso crystallogenesis. The first robot was developed in the MS&FB Group5,6. The other two have recently become available and are included here for completeness.
An overview of the protocol covered in this article is presented in Figure 1. All manipulations were performed at room temperature (~20 °C) under ambient conditions.
1. Preparing the Crystallization Plate
Setting up to do a crystallization trial robotically begins with the preparation of the base-plate of the glass sandwich crystallization plate (Figure 2), described in detail in Reference 2. The base-plate must first be silanized and the perforated double-stick spacer that creates the wells, must be applied to the plate. The materials and supplies needed for this are itemized under Materials.
Pre-assembled plates are commercially available (HR3-151, Hampton Research; MD11-55-100, Molecular Dimensions; and LCP96T-UVP70U, Swissci). For cost reasons, we prefer to assemble our own plates following the protocol above.
2. In Meso Robot 1
The first in meso robot to be demonstrated in this video article is the one currently in use in the MS&FB Group (Figure 3). Full details of the robot can be found under Materials and in the Reference section5. The materials and equipment required to set up a crystallization trial using the robot are itemized under Materials.
3. In Meso Robot 2. Mosquito LCP
The Mosquito LCP robot (Figure 4) incorporates a similar mesophase dispenser to that used by Robot 1. In contrast to Robot 1, it dispenses precipitant by means of disposable tips. Programming software is used to set up the instrument for working with particular crystallization plates and precipitant blocks, and to dispense user-defined volumes of mesophase and precipitant in a specified sequence. Such details are provided by the manufacturer and will not be described here.
4. In Meso Robot 3. Gryphon LCP
The Gryphon LCP robot (Figure 5) incorporates a similar mesophase dispensing system to that described above for Robots 1 and 2. What distinguishes it from the other two is that all 96 precipitant solutions are dispensed simultaneously.
5. Representative Results
The purpose of this video article is to demonstrate how to set up automatically crystallization trials with a viscous, membrane protein-laden mesophase in glass sandwich 96-well crystallization plates. The emphasis is on automation through the use of specialized robots that require minimal manual intervention. Reproducibility and precision, in terms of volumes of mesophase and precipitant dispensed and the placement of both within the well, are expected when a robot is used. These are important from the point of view of effective screening of conditions that support crystallogenesis. They are also critical for the next step in the analysis pipeline which is to evaluate crystal growth often done with imaging equipment. Drop or bolus location is key to the imaging process, and irregular and improper placement of bolus in the well usually requires user intervention to correct for and takes time. For purposes of illustration, examples of properly and improperly loaded plates are shown in Figure 6.
Figure 1. The flowchart summarizes the steps involved in the production, harvesting and cryo-cooling of in meso-grown membrane protein crystals. Steps surrounded by the dashed red line are the focus of this JoVE article. Robots were used to dispense mesophase and precipitant solutions in Steps 29-32. From Reference 3. Click here to view larger figure.
Figure 2. A fully loaded and sealed 96-well glass sandwich crystallization plate. Each well contains 50 nl cubic phase and 1 μl precipitant solution. For clarity, the cubic phase has been stained with Sudan Red and the precipitant solution includes Methylene Blue. From Reference 5.
Figure 3. The in meso robot (Robot 1). The robot has two arms. Arm 1 dispenses the protein-laden lipidic mesophase. Arm 2 dispenses precipitant solutions. During filling, the 96-well plate remains fixed in position on the deck of the robot which itself is stationary. The two arms move to deliver mesophase and precipitant solutions. From Reference 3.
Figure 4. The Mosquito LCP robot (Robot 2). In contrast to Robot 1, the deck of the Mosquito LCP, upon which sit the 96-well plate and the precipitant solution block, moves horizontally during filling.
Figure 5. The Gryphon LCP robot (Robot 3). During a set up, the lipidic cubic phase dispenser moves to deliver protein-laden mesophase onto the 96-well plate. The deck then translates horizontally to position the plate under the precipitant solution tip head. All 96 precipitant solutions are dispensed simultaneously. Picture sourced from the manufacturer (http://www.artrobbins.com/) and labeled.
Figure 6. A fully loaded and sealed 96-well glass sandwich plate (A) and wells properly (B) and improperly (C, D) filled using the in meso robot (Robot 1). The bar code label on the plate in A is used to track the plate in the plate incubator/imaging device. In panels B-D, precipitant solution and mesophase are marked P and M, respectively. The expected ‘fried egg on a pan’ appearance of the well in B is characteristic of a properly loaded and sealed well. In C, the precipitant has been dispensed into the well improperly in an off-center position and has come in contact with the spacer. In C, it would appear too that the volume of mesophase is less than it should be. An example of incomplete loading with precipitant solution is shown in D. For scale, the diameter of all wells is 6 mm.
In this video article we have demonstrated how to use a robot to automatically set up in meso crystallization trials in 96-well glass sandwich plates using a protein-laden lipidic mesophase. The robots used in this work were specially designed to include a positive displacement glass syringe for accurate and reproducible delivery of nanoliter volumes of the viscous and sticky mesophase, as originally described7.
Accuracy and precision are important features of a robot. However, these characteristics are only as good as the degree to and regularity which robot performance is evaluated and calibration is performed. It goes without saying that performance of the robot should be evaluated while individual plates are being set up. It is not appropriate to assume that the robot will function flawlessly and to leave the robot to run unattended. The attentive and observant operator should be in a position to note by a sound or an appearance when something is not working properly and to correct it immediately. Additionally, each plate should be carefully inspected by eye for uniformity of well contents as soon as the plate is sealed and before it is put away for crystallization trials. This should only require a few seconds to perform and can be done while the next plate is being loaded. Noticing, for example, that particular wells are not properly filled may highlight the fact that a certain precipitant dispensing tip is malfunctioning. Should delivery of mesophase be seen to be irregular, the relevant faulty item would need to be corrected immediately. By noting these issues and making the relevant adjustments during set up will save time and materials, including valuable lipid and membrane protein. If an imager is used to track crystal growth, accuracy and precision can also be monitored during imaging. For example, systematic problems with drop or bolus location by the imager indicate that something is not right and that corrective action somewhere upstream in the protocol is needed.
In the interests of reliable performance therefore the robot must be calibrated on a regular schedule and as needed. Calibrations should include volume of precipitant and mesophase delivered as well as bolus and precipitant placement in the well. Obviously, wherever possible calibration should be done using volumes and materials similar to those that will be used in trials conducted in the period covered by the quality control exercise.
As important as calibration is so too is having in stock an adequate supply of robot parts and supplies. Catastrophic and unexpected failures, blockages and crashes can and do occur. In such an event, having available a replacement precipitant delivery tip, for example, might mean that an extremely valuable membrane protein preparation is used as it should and is not wasted.
Some of the advantages of a robot include the fact that it will work essentially continuously and that it does not suffer from or ‘complain of’ fatigue. A robot can also be used under conditions that are not considered human-friendly, such as in the dark, under controlled lighting and environmental conditions, and at extremes of temperature. The robots demonstrated in this article were all used under ambient conditions at ~20 °C. However, there are proteins and projects that require non-ambient temperatures, controlled light11,12 and an oxidizing or a reducing environment13. All of these can be catered for, with relative ease, when a crystallization robot is used.
In an earlier JoVE video article we demonstrated how crystallization trials by the in meso method are set up manually 1. The minimum volume of mesophase that can be dispensed reliably by hand is limited by the visual acuity and steady handedness of the person setting up the trials. In our experience, volumes of mesophase as low as 100 nl are readily handled. We know of one lab where the default volume dispensed manually is about 40 nl. However, considerably smaller volumes are possible using a robot. Separately, we have shown that mesophase volumes as low as 550 picoliters can be dispensed robotically14. From that work it was clear that further miniaturization by robot is possible which, if implemented, would lead to a large reduction in the amount of valuable membrane protein needed to carry out a crystallization trial.
In this video article, three commercially available robots were used to demonstrate high-throughput membrane protein crystallization using lipidic mesophases. The first of these was developed in the MS&FB Group based on our experience setting up trials manually, as described in JoVE 17121. This is the instrument we have most familiarity with and the bulk of the current article is devoted to its use. The other two robots were on demonstration in the MS&FB Group at the time the article was written and the relevant footage is included here in the interests of completeness. All three robots use very much the same mesophase dispensing system, the essential feature of which is a positive displacement glass syringe5,7. They differ most significantly with regard to precipitant delivery. Robots 1 and 2 can dispense precipitant simultaneously into 8 wells, a single column on a crystallization plate at a time. In contrast, Robot 3 dispenses all 96 precipitant solutions in a single action. Robot 2 is the only instrument with disposable precipitant dispensing tips. There are pros and cons associated with the different instruments that depend on the particular application; these will not be elaborated on here. Suffice it to say that all three work and have produced crystals of membrane proteins by the in meso method.
The next steps in the overall process of structure determination by macromolecular crystallography are to harvest and to cryo-cool crystals from plates set up as described in this video article and to record and process X-ray diffraction from them. These topics are covered in separate JoVE articles in this series1,15.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
There are many who contributed to this work and most are from the Membrane Structural and Functional Biology Group, both past and present members. To all we extend our warmest thanks and appreciation. This work was supported in part by grants from Science Foundation Ireland (07/IN.1/B1836), the National Institutes of Health (GM75915, P50GM073210 and U54GM094599), and FP7 COST Action CM0902.
Name of reagent | Company | Catalogue number | Components |
Brayer (roller) | Fisher Scientific | 50820937 | Tool |
Gas-tight syringes | Hamilton | 81030 | Tool |
Glass coverslips | Marienfeld | 01029990911 | Disposable |
Glass plates | Marienfeld | 1527127092 | Disposable |
Gryphon LCP Robot | Art Robbins | NA | Tool |
In meso robot | Anachem/Gilson | NA | Tool |
Lab notebook | Various | NA | Tool |
Mosquito LCP Robot | TTP Labtech | NA | Tool |
Perforated double-stick spacer tape | Saunders Corporation (hole-punched) | customized | Disposable |
Precipitant solutions | Various | Various | Reagent |
Purified water | Millipore | NA | Reagent |
Rain-X | Shell Car Care | 80199200 | Reagent |
Syringe tips | Hamilton | 7770-020 (gauge 22) | Tool |
Tissues | Various | Various | Disposable |
Water bottle | various | NA | Reagent |