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"Chromatography, Affinity"
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Affinity monolith chromatography: a review of principles and recent analytical applications
by
Pfaunmiller, Erika L.
,
Paulemond, Marie Laura
,
Dupper, Courtney M.
in
Affinity
,
Analytical Chemistry
,
Analytical instruments
2013
Affinity monolith chromatography (AMC) is a type of liquid chromatography that uses a monolithic support and a biologically related binding agent as a stationary phase. AMC is a powerful method for the selective separation, analysis, or study of specific target compounds in a sample. This review discusses the basic principles of AMC and recent developments and applications of this method, with particular emphasis being given to work that has appeared in the last 5 years. Various materials that have been used to prepare columns for AMC are examined, including organic monoliths, silica monoliths, agarose monoliths, and cryogels. These supports have been used in AMC for formats that have ranged from traditional columns to disks, microcolumns, and capillaries. Many binding agents have also been employed in AMC, such as antibodies, enzymes, proteins, lectins, immobilized metal ions, and dyes. Some applications that have been reported with these binding agents in AMC are bioaffinity chromatography, immunoaffinity chromatography or immunoextraction, immobilized-metal-ion affinity chromatography, dye–ligand affinity chromatography, chiral separations, and biointeraction studies. Examples are presented from fields that include analytical chemistry, pharmaceutical analysis, clinical testing, and biotechnology. Current trends and possible directions in AMC are also discussed.
Journal Article
Immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography: a review on its applications
2012
After 35 years of development, immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC) has evolved into a popular protein purification technique. This review starts with a discussion of its mechanism and advantages. It continues with its applications which include the purification of histidine-tagged proteins, natural metal-binding proteins, and antibodies. IMAC used in conjunction with mass spectroscopy for phosphoprotein fractionation and proteomics is also covered. Finally, this review addresses the developments, limitations, and considerations of IMAC in the biopharmaceutical industry.
Journal Article
Heparin: role in protein purification and substitution with animal-component free material
by
Scheper, Thomas
,
Rinas, Ursula
,
Svenja Nicolin Bolten
in
Affinity chromatography
,
Alternatives
,
Anticoagulants
2018
Heparin is a highly sulfated polysaccharide which belongs to the family of glycosaminoglycans. It is involved in various important biological activities. The major biological purpose is the inhibition of the coagulation cascade to maintain the blood flow in the vasculature. These properties are employed in several therapeutic drugs. Heparin’s activities are associated with its interaction to various proteins. To date, the structural heparin-protein interactions are not completely understood. This review gives a general overview of specific patterns and functional groups which are involved in the heparin-protein binding. An understanding of the heparin-protein interactions at the molecular level is not only advantageous in the therapeutic application but also in biotechnological application of heparin for downstreaming. This review focuses on the heparin affinity chromatography. Diverse recombinant proteins can be successfully purified by this method. While effective, it is disadvantageous that heparin is an animal-derived material. Animal-based components carry the risk of contamination. Therefore, they are liable to strict quality controls and the validation of effective good manufacturing practice (GMP) implementation. Hence, adequate alternatives to animal-derived components are needed. This review examines strategies to avoid these disadvantages. Thereby, alternatives for the provision of heparin such as chemical synthesized heparin, chemoenzymatic heparin, and bioengineered heparin are discussed. Moreover, the usage of other chromatographic systems mimetic the heparin effect is reviewed.
Journal Article
Binding studies of promethazine and its metabolites with human serum albumin by high-performance affinity chromatography and molecular docking in the presence of codeine
by
Fernandes, Carla
,
Tiritan, Maria Elizabeth
,
Coelho, Maria Miguel
in
Affinity
,
Affinity chromatography
,
Binding
2024
“Purple Drank”, a soft drink containing promethazine (PMZ) and codeine (COD), has gained global popularity for its hallucinogenic effects. Consuming large amounts of this combination can lead to potentially fatal events. The binding of these drugs to plasma proteins can exacerbate the issue by increasing the risk of drug interactions, side effects, and/or toxicity. Herein, the binding affinity to human serum albumin (HSA) of PMZ and its primary metabolites [N-desmethyl promethazine (DMPMZ) and promethazine sulphoxide (PMZSO)], along with COD, was investigated by high-performance affinity chromatography (HPAC) though zonal approach. PMZ and its metabolites exhibited a notable binding affinity for HSA (%b values higher than 80%), while COD exhibited a %b value of 65%. To discern the specific sites of HSA to which these compounds were bound, displacement experiments were performed using warfarin and (S)-ibuprofen as probes for sites I and II, respectively, which revealed that all analytes were bound to both sites. Molecular docking studies corroborated the experimental results, reinforcing the insights gained from the empirical data. The in silico data also suggested that competition between PMZ and its metabolites with COD can occur in both sites of HSA, but mainly in site II. As the target compounds are chiral, the enantioselectivity for HSA binding was also explored, showing that the binding for these compounds was not enantioselective.
Journal Article
Layer-by-layer assembly of multilayered double hydroxides/polyoxometalate-coated magnetic nanoparticles for highly efficient phosphopeptide enrichment
2022
A layer-by-layer (LbL) assembly strategy was developed to prepare multilayered double hydroxide/polyoxometalate shell–coated magnetic nanoparticles. The introduction of functional shells not only offered abundant affinity sites of metal oxide and metal ions but also increased the surface area for the contact with targets. By combining the enrichment strategies of immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography and metal oxide affinity chromatography, the nanomaterial can capture phosphopeptides via a synergistic effect. The method presented a low detection limit of 0.1 fmol in combination with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) analysis. The nanomaterial showed satisfactory selectivity (1:1:5000 M ratio of
α
-
/β
-casein/bovine serum albumin), good recovery (92.07%), high adsorption capacity (117.6 mg g
−1
), and ten times reusability for capturing phosphopeptides.
Graphical abstract
Journal Article
Pilot investigation of magnetic nanoparticle–based immobilized metal affinity chromatography for efficient enrichment of phosphoproteoforms for mass spectrometry–based top-down proteomics
2023
Protein phosphorylation is a vital and common post-translational modification (PTM) in cells, modulating various biological processes and diseases. Comprehensive top-down proteomics of phosphorylated proteoforms (phosphoproteoforms) in cells and tissues is essential for a better understanding of the roles of protein phosphorylation in fundamental biological processes and diseases. Mass spectrometry (MS)–based top-down proteomics of phosphoproteoforms remains challenging due to their relatively low abundance. Herein, we investigated magnetic nanoparticle–based immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC, Ti
4+
, and Fe
3+
) for selective enrichment of phosphoproteoforms for MS-based top-down proteomics. The IMAC method achieved reproducible and highly efficient enrichment of phosphoproteoforms from simple and complex protein mixtures. It outperformed one commercial phosphoprotein enrichment kit regarding the capture efficiency and recovery of phosphoproteins. Reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC)–tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) analyses of yeast cell lysates after IMAC (Ti
4+
or Fe
3+
) enrichment produced roughly 100% more phosphoproteoform identifications compared to without IMAC enrichment. Importantly, the phosphoproteoforms identified after Ti
4+
-IMAC or Fe
3+
-IMAC enrichment correspond to proteins with much lower overall abundance compared to that identified without the IMAC treatment. We also revealed that Ti
4+
-IMAC and Fe
3+
-IMAC could enrich different pools of phosphoproteoforms from complex proteomes and the combination of those two methods will be useful for further improving the phosphoproteoform coverage from complex samples. The results clearly demonstrate the value of our magnetic nanoparticle–based Ti
4+
-IMAC and Fe
3+
-IMAC for advancing top-down MS characterization of phosphoproteoforms in complex biological systems.
Graphical Abstract
Journal Article
Immobilization of titanium dioxide/ions on magnetic microspheres for enhanced recognition and extraction of mono- and multi-phosphopeptides
2019
The authors are presenting a novel strategy for global phosphoproteome recognition in practical samples. It integrates metal oxide affinity chromatography (MOAC) and immobilization metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC). This resulted in a kind of titanium dioxide/ion-based multifunctional probe (dubbed T2M). The T2M combines the features of MOAC and IMAC including their recognition preferences towards mono- and multi-phosphorylated peptides. Hence, they exhibit an outstanding recognition capability towards global phosphoproteome, high sensitivity (the limit of detection of which is merely 10 fmol) and excellent specificity in MALDI-TOF MS detection. Their performance is further demonstrated by the identification of the phosphoproteome in non-fat milk and human saliva. By combining T2M with nano LC-MS/MS, remarkable results are obtained in the tryptic digestion of healthy eye lens and cataract lens phosphoproteomes. A total of 658 and 162 phosphopeptides, respectively, were identified. This indicates that phosphorylation and the appearance of cataract can be related to each other.
Graphical abstract
Schematic presentation of the preparation of titanium dioxide/ion-based multifunctional magnetic nanomaterials (T2M). The T2M based enrichment protocol exhibits outstanding recognition capability towards global phosphoproteome. This protocol shows great prospect for clarifying mechanism of phosphorylation-related diseases via further information acquisition.
Journal Article
Using sulfuramidimidoyl fluorides that undergo sulfur(vi) fluoride exchange for inverse drug discovery
by
Hammock, Bruce D
,
Mortenson, David E
,
Li, Suhua
in
Adenosine diphosphate
,
Affinity chromatography
,
Amino acids
2020
Drug candidates that form covalent linkages with their target proteins have been underexplored compared with the conventional counterparts that modulate biological function by reversibly binding to proteins, in part due to concerns about off-target reactivity. However, toxicity linked to off-target reactivity can be minimized by using latent electrophiles that only become activated towards covalent bond formation on binding a specific protein. Here we study sulfuramidimidoyl fluorides, a class of weak electrophiles that undergo sulfur(vi) fluoride exchange chemistry. We show that equilibrium binding of a sulfuramidimidoyl fluoride to a protein can allow nucleophilic attack by a specific amino acid side chain, which leads to conjugate formation. We incubated small molecules, each bearing a sulfuramidimidoyl fluoride electrophile, with human cell lysate, and the protein conjugates formed were identified by affinity chromatography–mass spectrometry. This inverse drug discovery approach identified a compound that covalently binds to and irreversibly inhibits the activity of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1, an important anticancer target in living cells.Latent functional groups—typically unreactive unless activated by protein binding—can provide additional selectivity to covalent drugs. Now, compounds containing the weakly electrophilic sulfuramidimidoyl fluoride group, capable of undergoing sulfur(vi) fluoride exchange, have been used to identify reactive proteins in human cell lysate. This approach has identified a compound that conjugates to and inhibits an important anticancer target.
Journal Article
Robust phosphoproteome enrichment using monodisperse microsphere–based immobilized titanium (IV) ion affinity chromatography
2013
Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics has become the preferred tool for the analysis of protein phosphorylation. To be successful at such an endeavor, there is a requirement for an efficient enrichment of phosphopeptides. This is necessary because of the substoichiometric nature of phosphorylation at a given site and the complexity of the cell. Recently, new alternative materials have emerged that allow excellent and robust enrichment of phosphopeptides. These monodisperse microsphere–based immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC) resins incorporate a flexible linker terminated with phosphonate groups that chelate either zirconium or titanium ions. The chelated zirconium or titanium ions bind specifically to phosphopeptides, with an affinity that is similar to that of other widely used metal oxide affinity chromatography materials (typically TiO
2
). Here we present a detailed protocol for the preparation of monodisperse microsphere–based Ti
4+
-IMAC adsorbents and the subsequent enrichment process. Furthermore, we discuss general pitfalls and crucial steps in the preparation of phosphoproteomics samples before enrichment and, just as importantly, in the subsequent mass spectrometric analysis. Key points such as lysis, preparation of the chromatographic system for analysis and the most appropriate methods for sequencing phosphopeptides are discussed. Bioinformatics analysis specifically relating to site localization is also addressed. Finally, we demonstrate how the protocols provided are appropriate for both single-protein analysis and the screening of entire phosphoproteomes. It takes ∼2 weeks to complete the protocol: 1 week to prepare the Ti
4+
-IMAC material, 2 d for sample preparation, 3 d for MS analysis of the enriched sample and 2 d for data analysis.
Journal Article
Synthesis and application of stationary phase for DNA-affinity chromatographic analysis of unmodified and antisense oligonucleotide
by
Studzińska Sylwia
,
Szumski Michał
,
Zawadzka Ewelina
in
Affinity
,
Affinity chromatography
,
Aminopropyl silica
2021
The goal of the research was the synthesis and application of an oligonucleotide immobilized stationary phase for the analysis of unmodified and antisense oligonucleotides. The method for attaching these molecules to aminopropyl silica modified with pentanedioic acid was developed. Each step of the synthesis was carefully controlled with the application of spectroscopic, elemental, and chromatographic analyses. The oligonucleotide-based stationary phase was applied for the retention studies. Unmodified oligonucleotides of different complementarity to the molecule attached as a stationary phase, as well as antisense oligonucleotides, were tested. The comparative study upon complex optimization of oligonucleotide analysis in different liquid chromatography modes was performed. Results have shown that this stationary phase may be applied for oligonucleotide analysis in hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography and ion exchange chromatography, but no unique sequence-based selectivity was obtained. Contrary results were observed for affinity chromatography, which allowed for specific separation of the complementary strands based on hydrogen bonding and stacking interactions, where the temperature was the main factor influencing the selectivity of the separation. Furthermore, the oligonucleotide-based stationary phase may be applied for comparative antisense oligonucleotide hybridization studies to a specific RNA sequence. All of the results have shown that affinity chromatography with oligonucleotide-based stationary phases is a powerful technique for the specific base recognition of polynucleotides.
Journal Article