Two-stage robotic crystal mounting of protein crystals for X-ray data collection
Georgiev
Atanas
author
Columbia University. Computer Science
Allen
Peter K.
author
Columbia University. Computer Science
Columbia University. Computer Science
originator
text
Articles
2008
English
We present a new microrobotic system for a crystallographic task called protein crystal mounting, which is the transfer of a crystal from its growth solution onto a tool designed to hold it for X-ray data collection. The system operates autonomously using feedback from a camera looking at the workspace through a microscope. Visual tracking is employed to monitor the location of the selected crystal and control a range of actuators for successful extraction. The task is performed in two stages: First, the crystal is taken from its drop into a pipette and is transported into a cryoprotecting liquid. Second, while in the cryoprotector, it is transferred from the pipette onto a tool to be used for data collection. Key features of this approach are the increased robustness of the system and the avoidance of the damaging effect of direct exposure of the crystal to room conditions. This work is part of a larger effort we have directed at the automation of the high-throughput crystallographic pipeline.
Robotics
2008 IEEE Conference on Automation Science and Engineering: Arlington, Va, 23-26 August 2008
Piscataway, N.J.
IEEE
2008
1019
1024
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/COASE.2008.4626573
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:15127
NNC
NNC
2012-10-31 14:25:05 -0400
2012-10-31 14:31:09 -0400
9129
eng