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In protein crystallography, the initial experimental problem is the identification of physical and chemical conditions that will support nucleation and crystal growth. Ideally, experiments to search for such conditions would be based on a full-factorial structure, with variation in the temperature and solution composition. However, consideration of even a moderate number of possibilities for the composition of the system will result in factorial experiments which may be prohibitively large. In this paper it is proposed that search experiments for protein crystallization might be based on orthogonal arrays. These are subsets of full-factorial experiments which possess a great deal of symmetry, such that a uniform distribution of points throughout the experimental region is preserved. Such experiments have reasonable size, explore the proposed experimental region in a systematic fashion, and form a logical basis for a sequential approach to the search for crystallization conditions. Examples of such initial search experiments are given, and their application to some recent protein crystallization problems in this laboratory is described briefly. The relationship of this approach to other protein crystallization search procedures is also discussed.
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