Rational Engineering in Protein Crystallization: Integrating Physicochemical Principles, Molecular Scaffolds, and Computational Design
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X-ray crystallography remains the gold standard for high-resolution structural biology, yet obtaining diffraction-quality crystals continues to pose a major bottleneck due to inherently low success rates. This review advocates a paradigm shift from probabilistic screening to rational engineering, reframing crystallization as a controllable self-assembly process. We provide a comprehensive overview of strategies that connect fundamental physicochemical principles to practical applications, beginning with contact design, which involves the active engineering of crystal contacts through surface entropy reduction (SER), introduction of electrostatic patches. Complementing these molecular approaches, we discuss physicochemical strategies that exploit heterogeneous nucleation on functionalized surfaces and gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) to lower the energy barrier for crystal formation. We also address scaffold design, utilizing rigid fusion partners and polymer-forming chaperones to promote crystallization even from low-concentration solutions. Furthermore, we highlight principles for controlling the behavior of multi-component complexes, based on our experimental experience. Finally, we examine de novo lattice design, which leverages AI tools such as AlphaFold and RFdiffusion to program crystal lattices from first principles. Together, these strategies establish an integrated workflow that links thermodynamic stability with crystallizability.