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  4. Extraction of haemoglobin from human blood by affinity precipitation using a haptoglobin-based stimuli-responsive affinity macroligand
 
conference paper

Extraction of haemoglobin from human blood by affinity precipitation using a haptoglobin-based stimuli-responsive affinity macroligand

Stocker-Majd, Gisela
•
Hilbrig, Frank
•
Freitag, Ruth
2008
Journal Of Chromatography A
27th International Symposium on the Separation and Analysis of Proteins, Peptides and Polynucleotides

Affinity precipitation was compared to affinity chromatography and batch adsorption as the final purification step in a protocol for the isolation of haemoglobin from human blood. Haptoglobin was the affinity ligand. The first steps on the process were realized by traditional methods (lyses of red blood cells followed by ammonium sulphate precipitation). For affinity chromatography (and batch adsorption) the ligand was linked to Sepharose, for affinity precipitation to a thermoresponsive polymer, namely poly(N-isopropylacrylamide). Five haptoglobin-poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) bioconjugates (affinity macroligands) were constructed with different polymer: haptoglobin-coupling ratios. Conjugation of haptoglobin to the soluble poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) apparently does not change the interaction thermodynamics with haemoglobin, as the haemoglobin binding constants calculated by a Scatchard analysis for the affinity macroligand were of the same order of magnitude as those described in the literature for the haemoglobin-haptoglobin complex in solution. Two elution protocols were used for haemoglobin release from the various affinity materials, one at pH 2, the other with 5 M urea at pH 11. Both affinity chromatography and affinity precipitation yielded a pure haemoglobin of high quality. Compared to the affinity chromatography, affinity precipitation showed a significantly higher ligand efficiency (ratio of the experimental capacity to the theoretical one). The method thus makes better use of the expensive affinity ligands. As affinity precipitation only requires small temperature changes to bring about precipitation/redissolution of the affinity complexes and a centrifugation step for recovery of the precipitate, the method in addition has advantages in term of scalability and simplicity. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

  • Details
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Type
conference paper
DOI
10.1016/j.chroma.2008.03.091
Web of Science ID

WOS:000256859000008

Author(s)
Stocker-Majd, Gisela
Hilbrig, Frank
Freitag, Ruth
Date Issued

2008

Published in
Journal Of Chromatography A
Volume

1194

Start page

57

End page

65

Subjects

affinity macroligand

•

affinity precipitation

•

batch adsorption

•

haptoglobin

•

haemoglobin

•

stimuli-responsive

•

thermoresponsive polymer

•

Stroma-Free Hemoglobin

•

Polypeptide-Chains

•

Purification

•

Chromatography

•

Binding

•

Oxyhemoglobin

•

Haemoglobin

•

Mechanism

•

Proteins

•

Capture

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SB  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
27th International Symposium on the Separation and Analysis of Proteins, Peptides and Polynucleotides

Orlando, FL

Oct 21-24, 2007

Available on Infoscience
November 30, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/61299
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