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2010

E.A. Ponomareva, V.E. Kartuzova, E.G. Vlakh, T.B. Tennikova

Journal of Chromatography B, 878 (2010) 567–574

The effect of different modes of α-chymotrypsin attachment to the surface of methacrylate-based ultrashort monolithic minicolumns on enzyme activity has been studied. The immobilization of protease was carried out via direct covalent binding of chymotrypsin, as well as via its attachment through small and polymer spacers. It was established that the lowest enzyme activity against N-benzoyl-l-tyrosine ethyl ester was found for bioreactor obtained via direct attachment of chymotrypsin to the surface of GMA–EDMA minidisks, whereas the highest parameter close to that determined for dissolved enzyme was found in the case of bioreactor prepared by the introduction of copolymer of 2-deoxy-N-methacryloylamido-d-glucose with N-vinylpyrrolidone and acrolein as a long and flexible polymer spacer. Additionally, the effect of flow rate of substrate recirculation on bioconversion efficiency was examined. Independently on immobilization method, the increase of flow rate led to the raise of biocatalytic efficiency.

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2009

K. Kovač, I. Gutierrez-Aguirre, M. Banjac, M. Peterka, M. Poljšak-Prijatelj, M. Ravnikar, J. Zimšek Mijovski, A. C. Schultze, P. Raspor

Journal of Virological Methods 162 (2009) 272–275

Human enteric viruses are detected frequently in various types of environmental water samples, such as irrigation water, wastewater, recreational water, ground or subsurface water and even drinking water, constituting a primary source of gastroenteritis or hepatitis outbreaks. Only a few, but still infective number of viral particles are normally present in water samples, therefore an efficient virus concentration procedure is essential prior to molecular detection of the viral nucleic acid. In this study, a novel chromatographic technology, Convective Interaction Media® (CIM) monolithic supports, were optimized and applied to the concentration of hepatitis A virus (HAV) and feline calicivirus (FCV), a surrogate of norovirus (NoV), from water samples. Two-step real-time RT-qPCR was used for quantitation of the virus concentration in the chromatographic fractions. Positively charged CIM QA (quaternary amine) monolithic columns were used for binding of HAV and FCV present in previously inoculated 1.5 l bottled water samples. Column bound viruses were eluted from the monolith using 1 M NaCl to a final volume of 15 ml. Elution volume was concentrated further by ultracentrifugation. When the CIM/ultracentrifugation method was compared with another concentration method employing positively charged membranes and ultrafiltration, the recovery of HAV was improved by approximately 20%.

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E. I. Trilisky, H. Koku, K. J. Czymmek, A. M. Lenhoff

Journal of Chromatography A, 1216 (2009) 6365–6376

Commercially available polymer-based monolithic and perfusive stationary phases were evaluated for their applicability in chromatography of biologics. Information on bed geometry, including that from electron microscopy (EM), was used to interpret and predict accessible volumes, binding capacities, and pressure drops. For preparative purification of biologics up to at least 7 nm in diameter, monoliths and perfusive resins are inferior to conventional stationary phases due to their low binding capacities (20–30 g/L for BSA). For larger biologics, up to several hundred nanometers in diameter, calculations from EM images predict a potential increase in binding capacity to nearly 100 g/L. The accessible volume for adenovirus calculated from the EM images matched the experimental value. While the pores of perfusive resins are essentially inaccessible to adenovirus under binding conditions, under non-adsorbing conditions the accessible intrabead porosity is almost as large as the interbead porosity. Modeling of breakthrough curves showed that the experimentally observed slow approach to full saturation can be explained by the distribution of pore sizes.

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M. R. Etzel, W. T. Riordan

Jorunal of Chromatography A 1216 (2009) 2621-2624

Clearance of biological impurities is an essential part of the manufacture of biotechnology-derived products such as monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). Salt is required during manufacture to solubilize the mAb product and stabilize it against aggregation, but salt can be a problem later during impurity clearance operations. In this work, the use of a traditional quaternary amine (Q) monolith, and a new salt-tolerant monolith were evaluated for the clearance of pathogenic impurities including viruses, DNA, and host-cell protein (HCP). The impact of flow rate, salt concentration, and presence of mixtures of impurities in the feed stream were evaluated. Both monoliths cleared DNA to the limit of detection at all salt concentrations, and both cleared virus and HCP equally well at no salt. At intermediate salt, clearance of HCP was greater for the salt-tolerant monolith, and only the salt-tolerant monolith cleared virus at elevated salt. In conclusion, monoliths successfully trapped impurities such as DNA, host-cell protein, and viruses, and at flow rates far greater than traditional chromatography columns packed with beads.

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R. J. Whitfield, S. E. Battom, M. Barut, D. E. Gilham, P. D. Ball

Journal of Chromatography A, 1216 (2009) 2725-2729

To support effective process development there is a requirement for rapid analytical methods that can identify and quantitate adenoviral particles throughout the manufacturing process, from cellular lysate through to purified adenovirus. An anion-exchange high-performance liquid chromatography method for the analysis of adenovirus type 5 (Ad5) particles has been developed using a novel quaternary amine monolithic column (Bio-Monolith QA, Agilent). The developed method separates intact Ad5 from contaminating proteins and DNA, thus allowing analysis of non-purified samples during process development. Regeneration conditions were incorporated to extend the functional life of the column. Once developed, the method was qualified according to performance criteria of repeatability, intermediate precision and linearity. The linear working range of analysis was established between 7.5 × 108 to at least 2.4 × 1010 viral particles (3 × 1010 to 9.6 × 1011 viral particles/mL), with a correlation coefficient of 0.9992. Relative standard deviations (RSDs) for intra- and inter-day repeatability and precision for retention time and peak area were less than 1 and 2.5%, respectively.

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M. C. Cheeks, N. Kamal, A. Sorrel, D. Darling, F. Farzaneh, N. K. H. Slater

Journal of Chromatography A, 1216 (2009) 2705–2711

Histidine-tagged lentiviral vectors were separated from crude cell culture supernatant using labscale monolithic adsorbents by immobilized metal affinity chromatography. The capture capacity, concentration factor, purification factor, and elution efficiency of a supermacroporous cryogel monolith were evaluated against the Sartorius BIA Separations convective interaction media (CIM) disc, which is a commercial macroporous monolith. The morphology of the polymeric cryogel material was characterised by scanning electron microscopy. Iminodiacetic acid was used as the metal chelating ligand in both monoliths and the chelating capacity for metal ions was found to be comparable. The CIM-IDA-Ni2+ adsorbent had the greatest capture capacity (6.7 × 108 IU/ml of adsorbent), concentration factor (1.3-fold), and elution efficiency (69%). Advantages of the cryogel monoliths included rapid, low pressure processing as well low levels of protein and DNA in the final purified vector preparations.

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I. Gutiérrez-Aguirre, M. Banjac, A. Steyer, M. Poljšak-Prijatelj, M. Peterka, A. Štrancar, M. Ravnikar

Journal of Chromatography A, 1216 (2009) 2700–2704

Rotaviruses are the leading cause of diarrhoea in infants around the globe and, under certain conditions they can be present in drinking water sources and systems. Ingestion of 10–100 viral particles is enough to cause disease, emphasizing the need for sensitive diagnostic methods. In this study we have optimized the concentration of rotavirus particles using methacrylate monolithic chromatographic supports. Different surface chemistries and mobile phases were tested. A strong anion exchanger and phosphate buffer (pH 7) resulted in the highest recoveries after elution of the bound virus with 1 M NaCl. Using this approach, rotavirus particles spiked in 1 l volumes of tap or river water were efficiently concentrated. The developed concentration method in combination with a real time quantitative polymerase chain reaction assay detected rotavirus concentrations as low as 100 rotavirus particles/ml.

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C. Delattre, M. A. Vijayalakshmi

Journal of Molecular Catalysis B: Enzymatic 60 (2009) 97–105

Recent research in the area of bioactive carbohydrates has shown the efficiency of oligosaccharides as signal molecules in a lot of biological activities. Newly observed functions of oligosaccharides and their abilities to act as specific regulatory molecules on various organisms have been more and more described. A successful development of these bioactive molecules in future needs efficient processes for specific oligosaccharides production. To exploit them for putative industrial scale up processes, two main strategies are currently investigated: the synthesis (chemical or bioconversion processes) and the polysaccharide cleavage (chemical, physical or biological processes). Nevertheless, if new manufacturing biotechnologies have considerably increased the development of these functional molecules, the main drawback limiting their biological applications is the complexity to engender specific glycosidic structures for specific activities. In the recent years, new enzymatic reactors have been developed, allowing the automatic synthesis of oligosaccharide structures. This review focuses on the knowledge in the area of bioactive oligosaccharides and gives the main processes employed to generate them for industrial applications with challenges of monolith microreactors.

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2008

F. Smrekar, M. Ciringer, M. Peterka, A. Podgornik, A. Štrancar

Journal of Chromatography B, (2007)

Phages are gaining importance due to their wide usage. In this work strong anion exchange monolithic chromatographic column was used for single step phage purification. Most of the proteins and DNA were removed and recovery of approximately 70% of infective virus was reproducibly achieved. 30 ml of phage sample was purified in around 10 min.

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I. V. Kalashnikova, N. D. Ivanova, T. B. Tennikova

Russian Journal of Applied Chemistry, 2008, Vol. 81, No. 5, pp. 867-873

A simple virus-cell complementary model system can be obtained using polymer-analogous reactions of the epoxy groups of glycidyl methacrylate-ethylene glycol dimethacrylate monolithic macroporous polymeric support and of the carboxy groups of styrene-methyl methacrylate polymeric nanospheres. The effect of thus designed microenvironment on the affinity binding parameters of virus-mimicking nanoparticles with the functionalized sorbent surface is studied by high-performance monolithic disk affinity chromatography.

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S. Likić, G. Rusak, M. Krajačić

Journal of Chromatography A, 1189 (2008) 451–455

High-performance liquid chromatography was developed for further separation of double-stranded (ds) RNAs obtained by CF-11 cellulose chromatography from plants infected with satellite associated cucumber mosaic virus. Fractions separated by monolithic polymer column, especially applicable for nucleic acid analyses, were identified electrophoretically and confirmed with a polymerase chain reaction test. Once standardized, the method has revealed clear evidence of satellite presence without precipitation and electrophoresis. According to demonstrated sensitivity, its application in the preliminary diagnostics of field samples is also predictable. Principally, it can be used as a powerful preparative approach resulting in highly pure satellite dsRNA for further analyses.

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C. Delattre, P. Michaud, M. A. Vijayalakshmi

Journal of Chromatography B, 861 (2008) 203–208

Fast production and purification of α-(1,4)-oligogalacturonides was investigated using a new enzymatic reactor composed of a monolithic matrix. Pectin lyase from Aspergillus japonicus (Sigma) was immobilized on CIM-disk epoxy monolith. Studies were performed on free pectin lyase and immobilized pectin lyase to compare the optimum temperature, optimum pH, and thermal stability. It was determined that optimum temperature for free pectin lyase and immobilized pectin lyase on monolithic support is 30 °C, and optimum pH is 5. Monolithic CIM-disk chromatography is one of the fastest liquid chromatographic method used for separation and purification of biomolecules due to high mass transfer rate. In this context, online one step production and purification of oligogalacturonides was investigated associating CIM-disk pectin lyase and CIM-disk DEAE. This efficient enzymatic bioreactor production of uronic oligosaccharides from polygalacturonic acid (PGA) constitutes an original fast process to generate bioactive oligouronides.

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2007

K. Isobe, Y. Kawakami

Journal of Chromatography A, 1144 (2007) 85-89(2007) 85-89

A convection interaction media (trade name CIM, Sartorius BIA Separation, Ljubljana, Slovenia) isobutyl monolithic disc was prepared by incubating a CIM epoxy monolithic disc with isobutylamine, and it was then applied to the purification of secondary alcohol dehydrogenase (S-ADH) and primary alcohol oxidase (P-AOD). Both enzymes were adsorbed on this column and eluted with high purity. Thus, S-ADH was purified to an electrophoretically homogeneous state by four column chromatographies using CIM DEAE-8 and CIM C4-8 tube monolithic columns, blue-Sepharose column and CIM isobutyl disc monolithic column. P-AOD was also purified to an electrophoretically homogeneous state by three column chromatographies of CIM DEAE-8 tube, CIM C4-8 tube and CIM isobutyl disc columns.

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I.Vovk, B. Simonovska

Journal of Chromatography B, 849 (2007) 337-343

The most abundant isoforms of tomato pectin methylesterase (PME; EC 3.1.1.11; Mr 26 kDa), polygalacturonase (PG; EC 3.2.1.15; PG1 with Mr 82 kDa) and a basic protein with Mr 42 kDa and unknown function were isolated from fresh tomato fruit by a fast chromatographic procedure on a Convective Interaction Media (CIM®) short monolithic disk column bearing carboxymethyl (CM) groups. The extraction of the targeted enzymes with 1.2 M NaCl solution was followed by precipitation with ammonium sulfate at 60% of saturation, solubilisation of the pellet in 0.5 M NaCl and fractionation using a linear gradient from 0 to 700 mM NaCl. Among six fractions five had PME activity and four had PG activity, while one fraction containing a pure protein with Mr 42 kDa with neither of these activities. Two concentrated fractions, one with PG and one with PME were further purified. A linear gradient from 0 to 500 mM NaCl with 20% CH3CN in the mobile phase was used for the PG fraction and two CM disks and a linear gradient from 0 to 200 mM NaCl were used for the PME fraction as a greater capacity was necessary in this case. From 4 kg of fresh tomato flesh we obtained 22 mg of purified PME, 1.8 mg of purified, active PG1, 13.5 mg of additional basic protein and a fraction with PG2 contaminated by a PME isoform. Carboxymethyl CIM disk short monolithic columns are convenient for semi-preparative and analytical work with tomato fruit pectolytic enzymes.

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I. Vovk, B. Simonovska

Journal of Chromatography A, 1144 (2007) 90-96(2007) 90-96

An improved cation-exchange chromatographic procedure on Convective Interaction Media (CIM, Sartorius BIA Separations, Ljubljana, Slovenia) short monolithic methacrylate disk columns was used for the isolation of salt-independent pectin methylesterase (PME; EC 3.1.1.11) isoform and endo-polygalacturonase PG1 (PG, EC 3.2.1.15) from ripe tomato fruit extract after studying the chromatographic conditions including type of disk, binding buffer, pH, eluent composition and different gradients. Between 10 and 20 μg of proteins gave reliable chromatograms. Both carboxymethyl (CM) and sulfonyl (SO3) disks were equally suitable for the fractionation of tomato extract using the new gradient, but only CM disk was appropriate for further purification of the PME and PG fractions, and provided fast and sharp separation of proteins. The isolation of pure PG1 could be achieved only by addition of 20% of acetonitrile to the mobile phase. About 200 μg of proteins were loaded at one chromatographic run at the fractionation and purification. Determination of the molecular weights of the separated proteins showed that dimer of salt-independent PME isoform was formed in concentrated solutions of the enzyme but dissociated upon dilution of the solution. From 6 kg of fresh tomato flesh, 28 mg of purified salt-independent PME, 12.5 mg of purified and active PG1 and 4 mg of PG2 fraction contaminated with salt-dependent PME isoform were obtained by means of semi-preparative chromatography on CIM disks.

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M. Benčina, J. Babič, A. Podgornik

Journal of Chromatography A, 1144 (2007) 135–142

In gene therapy and DNA vaccination, RNA removal from DNA preparations is vital and is typically achieved by the addition of ribonuclease into the sample. Removal of ribonuclease from DNA samples requires an additional purification step. An alternative is the implementation of immobilized ribonuclease. In our work, ribonuclease was covalently coupled onto the surface of methacrylate monoliths via epoxy or imidazole carbamate groups. Various immobilization conditions were tested by changing immobilization pH. Ribonuclease immobilized on the monolith via imidazole carbamate groups at pH 9 was found to be six times more active than the ribonuclease immobilized on the monolith via epoxy groups. Under optimal immobilization conditions the Michaelis–Menten constant, Km, for cytidine-2,3-cyclic monophosphate, and turnover number, k3 were 0.52 mM and 4.6 s-1, respectively, and mirrored properties of free enzyme. Enzyme reactor was found to efficiently eliminate RNA contaminants from DNA samples. It was active for several weeks of operation and processed 300 column volumes of sample. Required residence time to eliminate RNA was estimated to be around 0.5 min enabling flow rates above 1 column volume per min.

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P. Kramberger, M. Peterka, J. Boben, M. Ravnikar, A. Štrancar

Journal of Chromatography A, 1144 (2007), pg. 143–149

Drawbacks of conventional virus purification methods have led to the development of new, mostly chromatography-based methods. Short monolithic columns are stationary phases intended for purification of large molecules. In this work efficient chromatographic purification of tomato mosaic virus (ToMV) from plant material is described. Based on short monolithic column, the purification process was shortened from 5 days to 2 hours. High viral purity was achieved and recovery of chromatographic step was up to 90%. In addition, these columns enabled preliminary quantification of the virus in just a few minutes, much faster than other quantification methods (e.g. enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay or real-time polymerase chain reaction) which take 1–2 days. These results demonstrate the potential of short monolith column technology for purification and analysis of different viruses.

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J. Boben, P. Kramberger, N. Petrovič, K. Cankar, M. Peterka, A. Štrancar, M. Ravnikar

European Journal of Plant Pathology (2007) 118:59-71

A quantitative RT real-time PCR method was developed for the detection and quantification of Tomato mosaic virus (ToMV) in irrigation waters. These have rarely been monitored for the presence of plant pathogenic viruses, mostly due to the lack of efficient and sensitive detection methods. The newly developed method presented here offers a novel approach in monitoring the health status of environmental waters. ToMV was reliably detected at as low as 12 viral particles per real-time PCR reaction, which corresponds to the initial concentration of approximately 4.2 × 10-10 mg (6,300 viral particles) of ToMV per ml of sample. The sensitivity of the method was further improved by including the Convective Interaction Media® (CIM) monolithic chromatographic columns for quick and efficient concentration of original water samples. Seven out of nine water sources from different locations in Slovenia tested positive for ToMV, after concentrating the sample. Four samples tested ToMV-positive without the concentrating procedure. The presence and integrity of infective ToMV particles in the original sample, as well as in the chromatographic fraction, was confirmed using different methods from test plants, DAS ELISA to electron microscopy and real-time PCR. In this study, we propose a unique and simple diagnostic scheme for rapid, efficient, and sensitive monitoring of irrigation waters that could also be adopted for other plant, human or animal viruses.

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M. Peterka, D. Glover, P. Kramberger, M. Banjac, A. Podgornik, M. Barut, A. Štrancar

BioProcessing Journal, March/April 2005

The last 30 years have seen rapid and dramatic developments in recombinant DNA technology and the related biological sciences. In 1972, Paul Berg's group used restriction enzymes to cut DNA in half and then used ligases to stick the pieces of the DNA back together. By doing this, they produced the first recombinant DNA. Within a year, the first genetically engineered bacterium existed. A little more than ten years later, recombinant human insulin was approved for diabetic patients and became the first recombinant healthcare product. Before the end of the 1980s, the first gene therapy trial had occurred. Today, a large number of recombinant proteins are used as marketed drugs and even more are in clinical trials targeting a wide range of diseases.

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R. Nicoli, N. Gaud, C. Stella, S. Rudaz, J.-L. Veuthey

Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis 48 (2008) 398–407

The preparation and characterization of three trypsin-based monolithic immobilized enzyme reactors (IMERs) developed to perform rapid on-line protein digestion and peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) are described. Trypsin (EC 3.4.21.4) was covalently immobilized on epoxy, carboxy imidazole (CDI) and ethylenediamine (EDA) Convective Interaction Media® (CIM) monolithic disks. The amount of immobilized enzyme, determined by spectrophotometric measurements at 280 nm, was comprised between 0.9 and 1.5 mg per disk. Apparent kinetic parameters K*m and V*max, as well as apparent immobilized trypsin BAEE-units, were estimated in flow-through conditions using N-α-benzoyl-l-arginine ethyl ester (BAEE) as a low molecular mass substrate. The on-line digestion of five proteins (cytochrome c, myoglobin, α1-acid glycoprotein, ovalbumin and albumin) was evaluated by inserting the IMERs into a liquid chromatography system coupled to an electrospray ionization ion-trap mass spectrometer (LC-ESI–MS/MS) through a switching valve. Results were compared to the in-solution digestion in terms of obtained scores, number of matched queries and sequence coverages. The most efficient IMER was obtained by immobilizing trypsin on a CIM® EDA disk previously derivatized with glutaraldehyde, as a spacer moiety. The proteins were recognized by the database with satisfactory sequence coverage using a digestion time of only 5 min. The repeatability of the digestion (R.S.D. of 5.4% on consecutive injections of myoglobin 12 μM) and the long-term stability of this IMER were satisfactory since no loss of activity was observed after 250 injections.

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