Literature DB >> 7765237

The affinity technology in downstream processing.

N Labrou1, Y D Clonis.   

Abstract

The quality criteria imposed on several biochemicals are stringent, thus, high-separation purification technology is important to downstream processing. Affinity-based purification technologies are regarded as the finest available, and each one differs in its purifying ability, economy, processing speed and capacity. The most widely used affinity technology is classical affinity chromatography, however, other chromatography-based approaches have also been developed, for example, perfusion affinity chromatography, hyperdiffusion affinity chromatography, high-performance affinity chromatography, centrifugal affinity chromatography, affinity repulsion chromatography, heterobifunctional ligand affinity chromatography and the various chromatographic applications of 'affinity tails'. On the other hand, non-chromatographic affinity technologies aim at high throughput and seek to circumvent problems associated with diffusion limitations experienced with most chromatographic packings. Continuous affinity recycle extraction, aqueous two-phase affinity partitioning, membrane affinity filtration, affinity cross-flow ultrafiltration, reversible soluble affinity polymer separation and affinity precipitation are all non-chromatographic technologies. Several types of affinity ligands are used to different extents; antibodies and their fragments, receptors and their binding substances, avidin/biotin systems, textile and biomimetic dyes, (oligo)peptides, antisense peptides, chelated metal cations, lectins and phenylboronates, protein A and G, calmodulin, DNA, sequence-specific DNA, (oligo)nucleotides and heparin. Likewise, there are several support types developed and used; natural, synthetic, inorganic and composite materials.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7765237     DOI: 10.1016/0168-1656(94)90047-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biotechnol        ISSN: 0168-1656            Impact factor:   3.307


  6 in total

Review 1.  Dye-ligand affinity adsorbents for enzyme purification.

Authors:  N E Labrou
Journal:  Mol Biotechnol       Date:  2002-01       Impact factor: 2.695

2.  A novel strategy for proteome-wide ligand screening using cross-linked phage matrices.

Authors:  Chen Qian; Jian-Ning Liu; Fengyuan Tang; Dawen Yuan; Zhigang Guo; Jing Zhang
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2010-01-29       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 3.  Overview of Albumin and Its Purification Methods.

Authors:  Ramin Raoufinia; Ali Mota; Neda Keyhanvar; Fatemeh Safari; Sara Shamekhi; Jalal Abdolalizadeh
Journal:  Adv Pharm Bull       Date:  2016-12-22

4.  The water- and salt-stress-regulated Asr1 (abscisic acid stress ripening) gene encodes a zinc-dependent DNA-binding protein.

Authors:  Yossi Kalifa; Ayelet Gilad; Zvia Konrad; Michele Zaccai; Pablo A Scolnik; Dudy Bar-Zvi
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  2004-07-15       Impact factor: 3.857

5.  Dye-affinity labelling of bovine heart mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase and study of the NADH-binding site.

Authors:  N E Labrou; E Eliopoulos; Y D Clonis
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1996-04-15       Impact factor: 3.857

6.  VTT-006, an anti-mitotic compound, binds to the Ndc80 complex and suppresses cancer cell growth in vitro.

Authors:  Leena J Laine; Jenni H E Mäki-Jouppila; Emma Kutvonen; Pekka Tiikkainen; Thomas K M Nyholm; Jerry F Tien; Neil T Umbreit; Ville Härmä; Lila Kallio; Trisha N Davis; Charles L Asbury; Antti Poso; Gary J Gorbsky; Marko J Kallio
Journal:  Oncoscience       Date:  2021-12-10
  6 in total

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