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Dive into the research topics where Yun-Zhu Guo is active.

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Featured researches published by Yun-Zhu Guo.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008

A containerless levitation setup for liquid processing in a superconducting magnet

Hui-Meng Lu; Da-Chuan Yin; Hai-Sheng Li; Liqiang Geng; Chen-Yan Zhang; Qin-Qin Lu; Yun-Zhu Guo; Wei-Hong Guo; Peng Shang; Nobuko I. Wakayama

Containerless processing of materials is considered beneficial for obtaining high quality products due to the elimination of the detrimental effects coming from the contact with container walls. Many containerless processing methods are realized by levitation techniques. This paper describes a containerless levitation setup that utilized the magnetization force generated in a gradient magnetic field. It comprises a levitation unit, a temperature control unit, and a real-time observation unit. Known volume of liquid diamagnetic samples can be levitated in the levitation chamber, the temperature of which is controlled using the temperature control unit. The evolution of the levitated sample is observed in real time using the observation unit. With this setup, containerless processing of liquid such as crystal growth from solution can be realized in a well-controlled manner. Since the levitation is achieved using a superconducting magnet, experiments requiring long duration time such as protein crystallization and simulation of space environment for living system can be easily succeeded.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2012

Evaporation rate of water as a function of a magnetic field and field gradient.

Yun-Zhu Guo; Da-Chuan Yin; Hui-Ling Cao; Jian-Yu Shi; Chen-Yan Zhang; Yong-Ming Liu; Huan-Huan Huang; Yue Liu; Yan Wang; Wei-Hong Guo; Airong Qian; Peng Shang

The effect of magnetic fields on water is still a highly controversial topic despite the vast amount of research devoted to this topic in past decades. Enhanced water evaporation in a magnetic field, however, is less disputed. The underlying mechanism for this phenomenon has been investigated in previous studies. In this paper, we present an investigation of the evaporation of water in a large gradient magnetic field. The evaporation of pure water at simulated gravity positions (0 gravity level (ab. g), 1 g, 1.56 g and 1.96 g) in a superconducting magnet was compared with that in the absence of the magnetic field. The results showed that the evaporation of water was indeed faster in the magnetic field than in the absence of the magnetic field. Furthermore, the amount of water evaporation differed depending on the position of the sample within the magnetic field. In particular, the evaporation at 0 g was clearly faster than that at other positions. The results are discussed from the point of view of the evaporation surface area of the water/air interface and the convection induced by the magnetization force due to the difference in the magnetic susceptibility of water vapor and the surrounding air.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2012

Rapid crystallization from acoustically levitated droplets

Hui-Ling Cao; Da-Chuan Yin; Yun-Zhu Guo; Xiaoliang Ma; Jin He; Wei-Hong Guo; Xu-Zhuo Xie; Bo-Ru Zhou

This paper reports on an ultrasonic levitation system developed for crystallization from solution in a containerless condition. The system has been proven to be able to levitate droplets stably and grow crystals rapidly and freely from a levitated droplet. Crystals of four samples, including NaCl, NH(4)Cl, lysozyme, and proteinase K, were obtained successfully utilizing the system. The studies showed that the crystals obtained from the acoustically levitated droplets all exhibited higher growth rates, larger sizes, better shapes, fewer crystals, as well as fewer twins and shards, compared with the control on a vessel wall. The results indicated that containerless ultrasonic levitation could play a key role in improving the crystallization of both inorganic salts and proteins. The ultrasonic levitation system could be used as a ground-based microgravity simulation platform, which could swiftly perform crystallization and screening of crystallization conditions for space crystallization and other ground-based containerless techniques. Moreover, the approach could also be conveniently applied to researching the dynamics and mechanism of crystallization. In addition, the device could be used for the preparation of high-purity materials, analysis of minute or poisonous samples, study of living cells, environmental monitoring, and so on.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Utilisation of adsorption and desorption for simultaneously improving protein crystallisation success rate and crystal quality

Yun-Zhu Guo; Li-Hua Sun; Dominik Oberthuer; Chen-Yan Zhang; Jian-Yu Shi; Jianglei Di; Bao-Liang Zhang; Hui-Ling Cao; Yong-Ming Liu; Jian Li; Qian Wang; Huan-Huan Huang; Jun Liu; Jan-Mirco Schulz; Qiu-Yu Zhang; Jianlin Zhao; Christian Betzel; Jianhua He; Da-Chuan Yin

High-quality protein crystals of suitable size are an important prerequisite for applying X-ray crystallography to determine the 3-dimensional structure of proteins. However, it is often difficult to obtain protein crystals of appropriate size and quality because nucleation and growth processes can be unsuccessful. Here, we show that by adsorbing proteins onto porous polystyrene-divinylbenzene microspheres (SDB) floating on the surface of the crystallisation solution, a localised high supersaturation region at the surface of the microspheres and a low supersaturation region below the microspheres can coexist in a single solution. The crystals will easily nucleate in the region of high supersaturation, but when they grow to a certain size, they will sediment to the region of low supersaturation and continue to grow. In this way, the probability of crystallisation and crystal quality can be simultaneously increased in a single solution without changing other crystallisation parameters.


Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2013

A strategy for selecting the pH of protein solutions to enhance crystallization

Chen-Yan Zhang; Zi-Qing Wu; Da-Chuan Yin; Bo-Ru Zhou; Yun-Zhu Guo; Hui-Meng Lu; Ren-Bin Zhou; Peng Shang

The pH of a solution is an important parameter in crystallization that needs to be controlled in order to ensure success. The actual pH of the crystallization droplet is determined by the combined contribution of the buffers in the screening and protein solutions, although the contribution of the latter to the pH is often ignored. In this study, the effects of the buffer and protein solution pH values on the results of screening are systematically investigated. It was found that these parameters significantly affected the results and thus the following strategy for the selection of appropriate pH values is proposed: (i) when screening with only one protein solution, the pH should be as low, as high or as divergent from the pI as possible for a basic, acidic or neutral protein, respectively, within its stable pH range; (ii) when screening with two protein solutions, the pH values should be well separated from one another; and (iii) when multiple pH values are utilized, an even distribution of pH values is the best approach to increase the success rate of crystallization.


CrystEngComm | 2015

A protein crystallisation screening kit designed using polyethylene glycol as major precipitant

Yue Liu; Xianfang Zhang; Chen-Yan Zhang; Yun-Zhu Guo; Si‐Xiao Xie; Ren-Bin Zhou; Qing-Di Cheng; Er-Kai Yan; Ya-Li Liu; Xiao-Li Lu; Qin-Qin Lu; Hui-Meng Lu; Ya-Jing Ye; Da-Chuan Yin

Crystallisation of proteins is usually achieved with the help of chemical agents. Because there are few general guidelines in determining what agents will help to crystallise a specific protein, suitable crystallisation agents are often found via exhaustive trial-and-error tests by mixing many chemical agents (the collection of which is called a crystallisation screening kit) one-by-one with the protein. Currently, many commercially available crystallisation screening kits have been developed and utilised in practical crystallisation screen experiments. However, information regarding the design of new screening kits has yet to be expanded using a large amount of experimental data. Here, we show the step-by-step design processes of a polyethylene glycol-based screening kit. It was found that the screening performance could be improved by modifying the crystallisation screening kits according to the accumulated data (such as those in the Biological Macromolecule Crystallisation Database (BMCD)), the screening test results and existing knowledge. The screening kit designed in this paper can be used for practical protein crystallisation screen experiments and the method can be used in the design of other crystallisation screening kits.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2013

An Investigation of the Effects of Self-Assembled Monolayers on Protein Crystallisation

Chen-Yan Zhang; He-Fang Shen; Qianjin Wang; Yun-Zhu Guo; Jin He; Hui-Ling Cao; Yong-Ming Liu; Peng Shang; Da-Chuan Yin

Most protein crystallisation begins from heterogeneous nucleation; in practice, crystallisation typically occurs in the presence of a solid surface in the solution. The solid surface provides a nucleation site such that the energy barrier for nucleation is lower on the surface than in the bulk solution. Different types of solid surfaces exhibit different surface energies, and the nucleation barriers depend on the characteristics of the solid surfaces. Therefore, treatment of the solid surface may alter the surface properties to increase the chance to obtain protein crystals. In this paper, we propose a method to modify the glass cover slip using a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) of functional groups (methyl, sulfydryl and amino), and we investigated the effect of each SAM on protein crystallisation. The results indicated that both crystallisation success rate in a reproducibility study, and crystallisation hits in a crystallisation screening study, were increased using the SAMs, among which, the methyl-modified SAM demonstrated the most significant improvement. These results illustrated that directly modifying the crystallisation plates or glass cover slips to create surfaces that favour heterogeneous nucleation can be potentially useful in practical protein crystallisation, and the utilisation of a SAM containing a functional group can be considered a promising technique for the treatment of the surfaces that will directly contact the crystallisation solution.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2014

Surface treatment by oxidizing the plates can alter the response of protein crystallization

Yun-Zhu Guo; Yong-Ming Liu; Da-Chuan Yin; Jin He; Chen-Yan Zhang; Hui-Ling Cao; Hai Hou; Wei Ma; Wei-Hong Guo; Jian-Yu Shi; Chao Cui; Zhe Wang; Peng Shang

This report describes the modification of crystallization plates by simply oxidizing the surface of the protein wells. The oxidized crystallization plates were tested in standard protein crystallization screening and reproducibility studies. The results showed that the protein wells of the treated plates were smoother and more optically transparent than those of the untreated plates, and more importantly, protein crystallization was significantly promoted after the oxidation treatment. Because there is no change to the routine screening protocol, this method is simple and easy to apply in protein crystallization.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Selecting temperature for protein crystallization screens using the temperature dependence of the second virial coefficient.

Jun Liu; Da-Chuan Yin; Yun-Zhu Guo; Xikai Wang; Si‐Xiao Xie; Qin-Qin Lu; Yong-Ming Liu

Protein crystals usually grow at a preferable temperature which is however not known for a new protein. This paper reports a new approach for determination of favorable crystallization temperature, which can be adopted to facilitate the crystallization screening process. By taking advantage of the correlation between the temperature dependence of the second virial coefficient (B 22) and the solubility of protein, we measured the temperature dependence of B 22 to predict the temperature dependence of the solubility. Using information about solubility versus temperature, a preferred crystallization temperature can be proposed. If B 22 is a positive function of the temperature, a lower crystallization temperature is recommended; if B 22 shows opposite behavior with respect to the temperature, a higher crystallization temperature is preferred. Otherwise, any temperature in the tested range can be used.


CrystEngComm | 2016

Sensitivity of lysozyme crystallization to temperature variation

Yong-Ming Liu; Hai-Sheng Li; Zi-Qing Wu; Rui-Qing Chen; Qin-Qin Lu; Yun-Zhu Guo; Chen-Yan Zhang; Da-Chuan Yin

Environments with varying temperatures have been shown to beneficially increase the probability of obtaining protein crystals. Therefore, a cycling temperature strategy (CTS) has been proposed for protein crystallization screening. During the practical application of this strategy, it is necessary to know the effective temperature range that promotes crystallization to design a suitable temperature program. In this paper, the effects of different temperature ranges on lysozyme crystallization (or more specifically, nucleation) were investigated. The results show that a small periodic variation in the temperature range of as little as 0.4 K can have a significant effect on the crystallization success rate under some crystallization concentration conditions, confirming that crystallization of lysozyme is very sensitive to temperature variation. Because practical protein crystallization is always performed in an environment with slight temperature variations, the sensitivity of protein crystallization to temperature may provide an explanation for the poor reproducibility of protein crystallization. Further investigation of the CTS on lysozyme crystallization showed that a cycling temperature strategy exerts an effect on protein crystallization by altering the supersaturation caused by changes in temperature.

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Da-Chuan Yin

Northwestern Polytechnical University

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Chen-Yan Zhang

Northwestern Polytechnical University

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Qin-Qin Lu

Northwestern Polytechnical University

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Yong-Ming Liu

Northwestern Polytechnical University

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Hui-Meng Lu

Northwestern Polytechnical University

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Wei-Hong Guo

Northwestern Polytechnical University

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Hui-Ling Cao

Northwestern Polytechnical University

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Peng Shang

Northwestern Polytechnical University

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Xikai Wang

Northwestern Polytechnical University

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Jian-Yu Shi

Northwestern Polytechnical University

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