Chaotic advection mixer for capturing transient states of diverse biological macromolecular systems with time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering

By Kara Zielinski1, Andrea Katz, George Douglas Calvey, Suzette A. Pabit, Shawn K. Milano, Cody Aplin, Josue San Emeterio, Richard A. Cerione, Lois Pollack2

1. Center for Free-Electron Laser Science 2. Cornell University

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Type

journal-article

Author

Kara A. Zielinski and Andrea M. Katz and George D. Calvey and Suzette A. Pabit and Shawn K. Milano and Cody Aplin and Josue San Emeterio and Richard A. Cerione and Lois Pollack

Citation

Zielinski, K. A., Katz, A. M., Calvey, G. D., Pabit, S. A., Milano, S. K., Aplin, C., San Emeterio, J., Cerione, R. A., & Pollack, L. (2023). Chaotic advection mixer for capturing transient states of diverse biological macromolecular systems with time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering. IUCrJ, 10(3), 363–375. https://doi.org/10.1107/s2052252523003482

Abstract

Advances in time-resolved structural techniques, mainly in macromolecular crystallography and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), allow for a detailed view of the dynamics of biological macromolecules and reactions between binding partners. Of particular promise, are mix-and-inject techniques, which offer a wide range of experimental possibility as microfluidic mixers are used to rapidly combine two species just prior to data collection. Most mix-and-inject approaches rely on diffusive mixers, which have been effectively used within crystallography and SAXS for a variety of systems, but their success is dependent on a specific set of conditions to facilitate fast diffusion for mixing. The use of a new chaotic advection mixer designed for microfluidic applications helps to further broaden the types of systems compatible with time-resolved mixing experiments. The chaotic advection mixer can create ultra-thin, alternating layers of liquid, enabling faster diffusion so that even more slowly diffusing molecules, like proteins or nucleic acids, can achieve fast mixing on timescales relevant to biological reactions. This mixer was first used in UV–vis absorbance and SAXS experiments with systems of a variety of molecular weights, and thus diffusion speeds. Careful effort was also dedicated to making a loop-loading sample-delivery system that consumes as little sample as possible, enabling the study of precious, laboratory-purified samples. The combination of the versatile mixer with low sample consumption opens the door to many new applications for mix-and-inject studies.

DOI

Funding

NSF-STC Biology with X-ray Lasers (NSF-1231306)