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Affinity capture of a biotinylated retrovirus on macroporous monolithic adsorbents: Towards a rapid single‐step purification process
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Citations
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References
2005
Year
EngineeringGlycobiologyAdsorption CapacitiesPolysaccharideProtein PurificationBiochemical EngineeringPurification MethodAdvanced SeparationAffinity CaptureBiotransformationBiochemistryBioconjugationVirologyStreptavidin-coated MonolithAdsorptionBiomolecular EngineeringMacroporous Monolithic AdsorbentsBiotechnologyImmobilized EnzymeMedicineMacroporous MonolithBiotinylated Retrovirus
A streptavidin derivitised macroporous monolith was developed to enable single-step capture of chemically biotinylated Moloney Murine Leukaemia Virus (MoMuLV) from crude, unclarified cell culture supernatant. Monoliths were prepared by aqueous cryopolymerisation of acrylamide with N,N''-methylene-bis (acrylamide) and glycidyl methacrylate (Arvidsson et al. [2003] J Chrom A 986:275-290). Streptavidin was immobilised to the epoxy functionalised monoliths. Particulate-containing cell culture supernatant was passed through the monolith without preclarification of the feedstock and adsorption capacities of 2 x 10(5) cfu/ml of adsorbent were demonstrated (cf. Fractogel streptavidin, at 3.9 x 10(5) cfu/ml of adsorbent). The specific titre of the recovered fraction was increased by 425-fold; however, recoveries of less than 8% were achieved. Adsorption of nonbiotinylated MoMuLV on the streptavidin-coated monolith was not observed.
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