Development and applications of hollow fiber flow field-flow fractionation in the bioanalytical field. Studies of aggregation phenomena in complex protein samples
Recent advances in the fast growing area of therapeutic/diagnostic proteins and antibodies - novel and highly specific drugs - as well as the progress in the field of functional proteomics regarding the correlation between the aggregation of damaged proteins and (immuno) senescence or aging-related...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Other Authors: | |
Format: | Doctoral Thesis |
Language: | en |
Published: |
Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna
2014
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/6277/ |
id |
ndltd-unibo.it-oai-amsdottorato.cib.unibo.it-6277 |
---|---|
record_format |
oai_dc |
spelling |
ndltd-unibo.it-oai-amsdottorato.cib.unibo.it-62772015-03-02T04:44:34Z Development and applications of hollow fiber flow field-flow fractionation in the bioanalytical field. Studies of aggregation phenomena in complex protein samples Tanase, Otilia Maya <1982> CHIM/01 Chimica analitica Recent advances in the fast growing area of therapeutic/diagnostic proteins and antibodies - novel and highly specific drugs - as well as the progress in the field of functional proteomics regarding the correlation between the aggregation of damaged proteins and (immuno) senescence or aging-related pathologies, underline the need for adequate analytical methods for the detection, separation, characterization and quantification of protein aggregates, regardless of the their origin or formation mechanism. Hollow fiber flow field-flow fractionation (HF5), the miniaturized version of FlowFFF and integral part of the Eclipse DUALTEC FFF separation system, was the focus of this research; this flow-based separation technique proved to be uniquely suited for the hydrodynamic size-based separation of proteins and protein aggregates in a very broad size and molecular weight (MW) range, often present at trace levels. HF5 has shown to be (a) highly selective in terms of protein diffusion coefficients, (b) versatile in terms of bio-compatible carrier solution choice, (c) able to preserve the biophysical properties/molecular conformation of the proteins/protein aggregates and (d) able to discriminate between different types of protein aggregates. Thanks to the miniaturization advantages and the online coupling with highly sensitive detection techniques (UV/Vis, intrinsic fluorescence and multi-angle light scattering), HF5 had very low detection/quantification limits for protein aggregates. Compared to size-exclusion chromatography (SEC), HF5 demonstrated superior selectivity and potential as orthogonal analytical method in the extended characterization assays, often required by therapeutic protein formulations. In addition, the developed HF5 methods have proven to be rapid, highly selective, sensitive and repeatable. HF5 was ideally suitable as first dimension of separation of aging-related protein aggregates from whole cell lysates (proteome pre-fractionation method) and, by HF5-(UV)-MALS online coupling, important biophysical information on the fractionated proteins and protein aggregates was gathered: size (rms radius and hydrodynamic radius), absolute MW and conformation. Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna Reschiglian, Pierluigi 2014-04-09 Doctoral Thesis PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/6277/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
collection |
NDLTD |
language |
en |
format |
Doctoral Thesis |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
CHIM/01 Chimica analitica |
spellingShingle |
CHIM/01 Chimica analitica Tanase, Otilia Maya <1982> Development and applications of hollow fiber flow field-flow fractionation in the bioanalytical field. Studies of aggregation phenomena in complex protein samples |
description |
Recent advances in the fast growing area of therapeutic/diagnostic proteins and antibodies - novel and highly specific drugs - as well as the progress in the field of functional proteomics regarding the correlation between the aggregation of damaged proteins and (immuno) senescence or aging-related pathologies, underline the need for adequate analytical methods for the detection, separation, characterization and quantification of protein aggregates, regardless of the their origin or formation mechanism.
Hollow fiber flow field-flow fractionation (HF5), the miniaturized version of FlowFFF and integral part of the Eclipse DUALTEC FFF separation system, was the focus of this research; this flow-based separation technique proved to be uniquely suited for the hydrodynamic size-based separation of proteins and protein aggregates in a very broad size and molecular weight (MW) range, often present at trace levels. HF5 has shown to be (a) highly selective in terms of protein diffusion coefficients, (b) versatile in terms of bio-compatible carrier solution choice, (c) able to preserve the biophysical properties/molecular conformation of the proteins/protein aggregates and (d) able to discriminate between different types of protein aggregates.
Thanks to the miniaturization advantages and the online coupling with highly sensitive detection techniques (UV/Vis, intrinsic fluorescence and multi-angle light scattering), HF5 had very low detection/quantification limits for protein aggregates. Compared to size-exclusion chromatography (SEC), HF5 demonstrated superior selectivity and potential as orthogonal analytical method in the extended characterization assays, often required by therapeutic protein formulations. In addition, the developed HF5 methods have proven to be rapid, highly selective, sensitive and repeatable. HF5 was ideally suitable as first dimension of separation of aging-related protein aggregates from whole cell lysates (proteome pre-fractionation method) and, by HF5-(UV)-MALS online coupling, important biophysical information on the fractionated proteins and protein aggregates was gathered: size (rms radius and hydrodynamic radius), absolute MW and conformation. |
author2 |
Reschiglian, Pierluigi |
author_facet |
Reschiglian, Pierluigi Tanase, Otilia Maya <1982> |
author |
Tanase, Otilia Maya <1982> |
author_sort |
Tanase, Otilia Maya <1982> |
title |
Development and applications of hollow fiber flow field-flow fractionation in the bioanalytical field. Studies of aggregation phenomena in complex protein samples |
title_short |
Development and applications of hollow fiber flow field-flow fractionation in the bioanalytical field. Studies of aggregation phenomena in complex protein samples |
title_full |
Development and applications of hollow fiber flow field-flow fractionation in the bioanalytical field. Studies of aggregation phenomena in complex protein samples |
title_fullStr |
Development and applications of hollow fiber flow field-flow fractionation in the bioanalytical field. Studies of aggregation phenomena in complex protein samples |
title_full_unstemmed |
Development and applications of hollow fiber flow field-flow fractionation in the bioanalytical field. Studies of aggregation phenomena in complex protein samples |
title_sort |
development and applications of hollow fiber flow field-flow fractionation in the bioanalytical field. studies of aggregation phenomena in complex protein samples |
publisher |
Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/6277/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT tanaseotiliamaya1982 developmentandapplicationsofhollowfiberflowfieldflowfractionationinthebioanalyticalfieldstudiesofaggregationphenomenaincomplexproteinsamples |
_version_ |
1716731773085286400 |