Currently there are many ion exchangers available for protein puriücation, but there is little information on how efficiently the ion exchanger surface is used for protein binding. In this work we present the results from a confocal scanning laser microscope study of two anion exchangers, DEAE Toyop
Competitive adsorption of labeled and native protein in confocal laser scanning microscopy
✍ Scribed by Christopher A. Teske; Eric von Lieres; Magnus Schröder; Asif Ladiwala; Steven M. Cramer; Jürgen J. Hubbuch
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 208 KB
- Volume
- 95
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0006-3592
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Confocal laser scanning microscopy has been previously applied to the study of protein uptake in porous chromatography resins. This method requires labeling the protein with a fluorescent probe. The labeled protein is then diluted with a large quantity of native protein so that the fluorescence intensity is a linear function of the labeled protein concentration. Ideally, the attachment of a fluorescent probe should not affect the affinity of the protein for the stationary phase; however, recent experimental work has shown that this assumption is difficult to satisfy. In the present study, we present a mathematical model of protein diffusion and adsorption in a single adsorbent particle. The differences in adsorption behavior of labeled and native protein are accounted for by treating the system as a two‐component system (labeled and native protein) described by the steric mass action isotherm (SMA). SMA parameters are regressed from experimental linear gradient elution data for lysozyme and lysozyme‐dye conjugates (for the fluorescent dyes Cy3, Cy5, Bodipy FL, and Atto635). When the regressed parameters are employed in the model, an overshoot in the labeled lysozyme concentration is predicted for Cy5‐ and Bodipy‐labeled lysozyme, but not for Atto635‐labeled lysozyme. The model predictions agree qualitatively well with recent work showing the dependence of the concentration overshoot on the identity of the attached dye and provide further evidence that the overshoot is likely caused by the change of binding characteristics due to the fluorescent label. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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