Short Description
ROCK IMAGER is designed for protein crystallization screening. It captures superior quality images of your protein drops while learning critical information about your crystals. It can screen conditions with various imaging methods to discover more crystals, using visible light, UV fluorescence, and UV absorption, among others. Imaging is carried out under precise temperature control from 30°C down to 4°C.
Contact Person
Univ.-Prof. Dr. Hans Brandstetter
Research Services
Time-resolved and temperature-controlled monitoring
Documentation and AI-assisted evaluation of crystallisation preparations in microtitre plate format
Methods & Expertise for Research Infrastructure
The ROCK IMAGER is used to identify protein crystals, the bottleneck in the elucidation of crystal structures.
The instrument allows automated, depth-focused microscopy of protein crystallisation plates, i.e. the microscopy images at different z-layers of the drop are added together. The growth and microscopic monitoring of the protein crystallisation preparations is carried out at a controlled ambient temperature and at definable time intervals, so that the growth kinetics of crystal preparations can also be resolved and thus optimised. Finally, microscopy is carried out not only in the visible but also in the UV range. The combination of these wavelengths allows efficient and partially automated crystal detection in front of large amorphous or low-molecular crystal backgrounds.
Allocation to research infrastructure
Technical University of Munich
Sanford-Burnham Institute La Jolla
University of Freiburg
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
2023
Elfriede Dall
FWF
https://www.fwf.ac.at/forschungsradar/10.55776/Y1469
2024
Roman W. Lange, Konstantin Bloch, Miriam Ruth Heindl, Jan Wollenhaupt, Manfred S. Weiss, Hans Brandstetter, Gerhard Klebe, Franco H. Falcone, Eva Böttcher-Friebertshäuser, Sven O. Dahms, Torsten Steinmetzer
ChemMedChem
https://doi.org/10.1002/cmdc.202400057
Inhibitors of the Elastase LasB for the Treatment of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Lung Infections
2023
Jelena Konstantinović, Andreas M. Kany, Alaa Alhayek, Ahmed S. Abdelsamie, Asfandyar Sikandar, Katrin Voos, Yiwen Yao, Anastasia Andreas, Roya Shafiei, Brigitta Loretz, Esther Schönauer, Robert Bals, Hans Brandstetter, Rolf W. Hartmann, Christian Ducho, Claus-Michael Lehr, Christoph Beisswenger, Rolf Müller, Katharina Rox, Jörg Haupenthal, and Anna K.H. Hirsch
ACS Central Science
https://doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.3c01102