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Crystal Gallery  

Do you want to show off the crystals you grew? Be a part of the Hampton Research Crystal Gallery. Submit your pictures either by mail or e-mail them to tech@hrmail.com. Be sure to include your name and institution. A description of your crystal pictures and how they grew is not necessary, unless you would like to share. By submitting pictures to the Crystal Gallery your crystals will appear in the next Hampton Research "Crystallization Research Tools" catalog.

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Protein crystals

By Kimberly J. Skinner
Structural Biology and Biophysics
Global R&D, Sandwich, Kent, United Kingdom
Protein crystal with the heavy atom derivative Potassium osmate

By Kimberly J. Skinner
Structural Biology and Biophysics
Pfizer Global R&D, Sandwich, Kent, United Kingdom

Scissor Sisters and polypropylene glycol

By Seth Kirby
English Kills
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Crystals of a Bacillus subtilis protein

By Marcus Resch
Department of Biotechnology
Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg

Crystals of Peptidoglycan Recognition Protein (PGRP) from camel milk grown using the Hampton Research PEG/Ion screen

By Sujata Sharma
Department of Biophysics
All India Institute of Medical Sciences
Crystals of Peptidoglycan Recognition Protein (PGRP) from camel milk grown using the Hampton Research PEG/Ion screen

By Sujata Sharma
Department of Biophysics
All India Institute of Medical Sciences

Crystals of a kinase complex. Initial hit from Hampton Research Index crystallization screen. First round optimization, structure solved to ~2.3 Angstrom.

By Annie Hassell
GlaxoSmithKline
RTP, North Carolina, USA
Crystals of kinase complex optimized from a Hampton Research Tacsimate based reagent.

By Michelle Quiles
GlaxoSmithKline
RTP, North Carolina, USA

 
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