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Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Vol.65, No.4, 371-381, 1999
Purification of recombinant and human apolipoprotein A-1 using surfactant micelles in aqueous two-phase systems: Recycling of thermoseparating polymer and surfactant with temperature-induced phase separation
An effective system has been developed for purification of apolipoprotein A-1 from Escherichia coli fermentation solution and human plasma using aqueous two-phase extraction and thermal-phase separation. The system included non-ionic surfactants (Triton or Tween) and as top phase-forming polymer a random copolymer of ethylene oxide (50%) and propylene oxide (50%), Breox PAG 50A 1000, was used. The bottom phase-forming polymer was either hydroxypropyl starch, Reppal PES 100 and PES 200, or hydroxyethyl starch, Solfarex A 85. The top-phase-forming polymer and the surfactants are thermoseparating in water solution, i.e., when heated a water phase and a polymer/surfactant phase are formed. Recombinant apolipoprotein A-1, the Milano variant, was extracted from E. coil fermentation solution in a primary Breox-starch phase system followed by thermal separation of the Breox phase where the target protein was recovered in the water phase. Both in the Breox-starch system and in the water-Breox system Triton X-100 was partitioned to the Breox phase. The addition of non-ionic surfactants to the Breox-starch system had strong effect on the purification and yield of the amphiphilic apolipoprotein A-1. In a system containing 17% Breox PAG 50A 1000, 12% Reppal PES 100 and addition of 1% Triton X-100 the purification factor was 7.2, and the yield 85% after thermal separation of the Breox phase. Recycling of copolymer and surfactant was possible after thermal separation of copolymer phase. Approximately 85% of the copolymer and surfactant could be recycled in each extraction cycle. DNA could be strongly partitioned to the starch phase in the primary-phase system. This resulted in a 1000-fold reduction of E. coil DNA in the apolipoprotein A-1 solution obtained after thermoseparation. In extraction from human plasma containing low concentrations of apolipoprotein A-1, it was possible to reach a purification factor of 420 with 98% yield. By reducing the volume ratio to 0.1 Apo A-1 could be concentrated in a small volume of top phase (concentration factor 10) with a yield of 85% and a purification factor of 110.
Keywords:SINGLE PROTEIN PROPERTY;CHEMICALLY-MODIFIED PROTEINS;WATER 2-PHASE SYSTEMS;ENZYME-PURIFICATION;PLASMA-LIPOPROTEINS;MOLECULAR CHARACTERIZATION;ELECTROSTATIC INTERACTIONS;HYDROXYPROPYL STARCH;BIPHASIC SYSTEMS;HYDROPHOBICITY