Abstract

A novel chromatographic medium for high-capacity protein adsorption was fabricated by grafting dextran (40 kDa) onto the pore surfaces of superporous agarose (SA) beads. The bead was denoted as D-SA. D-SA, SA and homogeneous agarose (HA) beads were modified with sulfopropyl (SP) group to prepare cation exchangers, and the adsorption and uptake of lysozyme on all three cation-exchange chromatographic beads (SP-HA, SP-SA and SP-D-SA) were investigated at salt concentrations of 6–50 mmol/L. Static adsorption experiments showed that the adsorption capacity of SP-D-SA (2.24 mmol/g) was 78% higher than that of SP-SA (1.26 mmol/g) and 54% higher than that of SP-HA (1.45 mmol/g) at a salt concentration of 6 mmol/L. Moreover, salt concentration had less influence on the adsorption capacity and dissociation constant of SP-D-SA than it did on SP-HA, suggesting that dextran-grafted superporous bead is a more potent architecture for chromatographic beads. In the dynamic uptake of lysozyme to the three cation-exchange beads, the D e/ D 0 (the ratio of effective pore diffusivity to free solution diffusivity) values of 1.6–2.0 were obtained in SA-D-SA, indicating that effective pore diffusivities of SP-D-SA were about two times higher than free solution diffusivity for lysozyme. At 6 mmol/L NaCl, the D e value in SA-D-SA (22.0 × 10 −11 m 2/s) was 14.4-fold greater than that in SP-HA. Due to the superior uptake kinetics in SA-D-SA, the highest dynamic binding capacity (DBC) and adsorption efficiency (the ratio of DBC to static adsorption capacity) was likewise found in SP-D-SA. It is thus confirmed that SP-D-SA has combined the advantages of superporous matrix structure and drafted ligand chemistry in mass transport and offers a new opportunity for the development of high-performance protein chromatography.

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