Back to Search Start Over

Polyelectrolyte–protein interaction at low ionic strength: required chain flexibility depending on protein average charge

Authors :
Florian Capito
Bernd Stanislawski
Romas Skudas
Harald Kolmar
Source :
Colloid and Polymer Science. 291:1759-1769
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2013.

Abstract

The effect of low ionic strength leading to reduced polyelectrolyte–protein interactions has been shown by in silico and in vitro experiments, suggesting polyelectrolyte rigidity increasing at low ionic strength, thus leading to reduced interactions with proteins. This contribution elucidates polyelectrolyte–protein precipitation in the 0–2.6-mS cm−1 ionic strength regime with polyelectrolyte rigidity determinations, using viscosimetry at these conditions, also considering protein charge distributions, using different proteins. Precipitation yields increased from 5 to 40 % at low ionic strength to up to 90 % at intermediate ionic strength, depending on protein and polyelectrolyte type, using lysozyme and three different monoclonal antibodies. Comparing precipitation behavior of the monoclonal antibodies, a qualitative correlation between required polyelectrolyte flexibility to enhance protein precipitation and protein average charge as well as hydrophobicity of the antibodies was discovered. Antibodies with lower average charge and less hydrophobicity required more flexible polyelectrolytes to enhance precipitation behavior by allowing interaction of the polyelectrolytes with proteins, attaching to positively charged protein patches while “circumnavigating” negatively charged protein areas. In contrast, antibodies with higher protein average charge showed increasing precipitation yields up to 90 % already at lower ionic strength, associated with then more rigid polyelectrolyte structures. Therefore, designing polyelectrolytes with specific chain flexibility could help to improve precipitation behavior toward specific target proteins in polyelectrolyte-driven purification techniques.

Details

ISSN :
14351536 and 0303402X
Volume :
291
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Colloid and Polymer Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........82f2430c977a20c5789b1fa6a9ac953e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00396-013-2911-3