| Literature DB >> 22811068 |
Charlisa R Daniels1, Lydia Kisley, Hannah Kim, Wen-Hsiang Chen, Mohan-Vivekanandan Poongavanam, Carmen Reznik, Katerina Kourentzi, Richard C Willson, Christy F Landes.
Abstract
Ion-exchange chromatography relies on electrostatic interactions between the adsorbent and the adsorbate and is used extensively in protein purification. Conventional ion-exchange chromatography uses ligands that are singly charged and randomly dispersed over the adsorbent, creating a heterogeneous distribution of potential adsorption sites. Clustered-charge ion exchangers exhibit higher affinity, capacity, and selectivity than their dispersed-charge counterparts of the same total charge density. In the present work, we monitored the transport behavior of an anionic protein near clustered-charge adsorbent surfaces using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. We can resolve protein-free diffusion, hindered diffusion, and association with bare glass, agarose-coated, and agarose-clustered peptide surfaces, demonstrating that this method can be used to understand and ultimately optimize clustered-charge adsorbent and other surface interactions at the molecular scale.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22811068 PMCID: PMC3671587 DOI: 10.1002/jmr.2206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Recognit ISSN: 0952-3499 Impact factor: 2.137