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2009

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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2008

P. Gagnon

MSS2008

When monoclonal antibodies were first beginning to be commercialized, expression levels over 100 mg/L were considered outstanding, and cell culture was viewed as the bottleneck in manufacturing productivity. Antibody expression levels now commonly exceed 1 g/L and reports of 10 and 15 g/L have been recently announced. Downstream processing is now considered the bottleneck.

In one sense, the bottleneck is artificial. Cell culture production takes about two weeks (not counting preparation of seed stock) and purification takes about a week. In another sense, the bottleneck is real, and a genuine concern. Process time for the protein A capture step from 20,000 L of cell culture supernatant (CCS) commonly requires 72-96 hours. This represents multiple cycles. The long hold time for IgG produced in the early cycles increases the risk of degradation by proteolysis, deamidation, etc. It also increases the risk of contamination.

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V. Frankovič, A. Podgornik, N. Lendero Krajnc, F. Smrekar, P. Krajnc, A. Štrancar

Journal of Chromatography A, 1207 (2008) 84–93(2008) 84 – 93

A weak ion-exchange grafted methacrylate monolith was prepared by grafting a methacrylate monolith with glycidyl methacrylate and subsequently modifying the epoxy groups with diethylamine. The thickness of the grafted layer was determined by measuring permeability and found to be approximately 90 nm. The effects of different buffer solutions on the pressure drop were examined and indicated the influence of pH on the permeability of the grafted monolith. Protein separation and binding capacity (BC) were found to be flow-unaffected up to a linear velocity of 280 cm/h. A comparison of the BC for the non-grafted and grafted monolith was performed using β-lactoglobulin, bovine serum albumin (BSA), thyroglobulin, and plasmid DNA (pDNA). It was found that the grafted monolith exhibited 2- to 3.5-fold higher capacities (as compared to non-grafted monoliths) in all cases reaching values of 105, 80, 71, and 17 mg/ml, respectively. It was determined that the maximum pDNA capacity was reached using 0.1 M NaCl in the loading buffer. Recovery was comparable and no degradation of the supercoiled pDNA form was detected. Protein z-factors were equal for the non-grafted and grafted monolith indicating that the same number of binding sites are available although elution from the grafted monolith occurred at higher ionic strengths. The grafted monolith exhibited lower efficiency than the non-grafted ones. However, the baseline separation of pDNA from RNA and other impurities was achieved from a real sample.

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A. Jungbauer, R. Hahn

Journal of Chromatography A, 1184 (2008) 62–79(2008) 62 – 79

Monoliths are considered as the fourth-generation chromatography material. Their use for preparative separation of biomolecules has been evolved over the past decade. Monolithic columns up to 8 L in size are already commercially available for separation of large biomolecules such as proteins, protein aggregates, plasmid DNA, and viruses. These applications leverage monoliths’ inherent properties, such as fast operation and high capacity for large biomolecules. The height equivalent to a theoretical plate (HETP) and dynamic binding capacity do not change with velocity. This is explained by the convective transport through the channels with a diameter of above 1000 nm and has been experimentally verified and also supported by theoretical analyses. Despite low absolute surface area, these large channels provide enough area for adsorption of these large biomolecules, which cannot penetrate into conventional chromatography media designed for protein separation. Monoliths for preparative separations are mainly cast as polymethacrylate or polyacrylamide blocks and have been functionalized as ion exchangers or hydrophobic interaction chromatography media. So-called cryogels have channels more than 30 μm wide, enabling efficient processing of suspensions or even cell-chromatography. This review discusses the pressure drop characteristics, mass transfer properties, scale-up, and applications of monoliths in the context of conventional chromatography media.

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E. S. Sinitsyna, E. N. Vlasova, E. G. Vlakh, T. B. Tennikova

Russian Journal of Applied Chemistry, 2008, Vol. 81, No. 8, pp. 1403–1409

Copolymers containing aldehyde, succinimidyl carbonate, and imidazolecarbamate groups were prepared by polymer-analogous transformations of epoxy groups of a macroporous monolithic polymeric support derived from glycidyl methacrylate and ethylene glycol dimethacyrlate. The effect of certain parameters on the course of the copolymer modification and immobilization of a protein on the surface of the polymeric support was studied. The possibility of using the matrices obtained for development of biorecognizing systems was examined.

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M. Barut, A. Podgornik, L. Urbas, B. Gabor, P. Brne, J. Vidič, S. Plevčak, A. Štrancar

J. Sep. Sci. 2008, 31, 1867 – 1880

This review describes the novel chromatography stationary phase – a porous monolithic methacrylate-based polymer – in terms of the design of the columns and some of the features that make these columns attractive for the purification of large biomolecules. We first start with a brief summary of the characteristics of these large molecules (more precisely large proteins like immunoglobulins G and M, plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), and viral particles), and a list of some of the problems that were encountered during the development of efficient purification processes. We then briefly describe the structure of the methacrylate-based monolith and emphasize the features which make them more than suitable for dealing with large entities. The highly efficient structure on a small scale can be transferred to a large scale without the need of making column modifications, and the various approaches of how this is accomplished are briefly presented in this paper. This is followed by presenting some of the examples from the bioprocess development schemes, where the implementation of the methacrylate-based monolithic columns has resulted in a very efficient and productive process. Following this, we move back to the analytical scale and demonstrate the efficiency of the monolithic column – where the mass transfer between the stationary and mobile phase is greatly enhanced – for the in-process and final control of the new therapeutics. The combination of an efficient structure and the appropriate hardware results in separations of proteins with residence time less than 0.1 s.

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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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2007

R. Hahn, A. Tscheliessnig, P. Bauerhansl, A. Jungbauer

J. Biochem. Biophys. Methods 70 (2007) 87–94

Monolithic media have found widespread use as excellent tools for fast analytical separations of small molecules, proteins, pDNA and viruses. Polymethacrylate monoliths with large channels are attractive for capturing large molecules, like immunoglobulins, DNA, and viruses. For preparative purposes, these monoliths are operated in radial flow mode. Band spreading in monoliths is extremely low and mostly dominated by the contribution of extra column effects. The model used here had a single axial dispersion coefficient which lumps together extra column effects and the intrinsic band spreading of the monolithic material to characterize the adsorption of proteins and pDNA on polymethacrylate ion-exchange monoliths. Due to the fact that the performance of the monolith was unaffected by the velocity within the applied range, and due to highly favourable adsorption isotherms, a constant pattern model could be applied to predict preparative runs on radial flow units assuming axial flow for modelling.

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R. Skudas, B. A. Grimes, E. Machtejevas, V. Kudirkaite, O. Kornysova, T. P. Hennessy, D. Lubda, K. K. Unger

Journal of Chromatography A, 1144 (2007) 72-84(2007) 72 - 84

In this work, monolithic silica columns with the C4, C8, and C18 chemistry and having various macropore diameters and two different mesopore diameters are studied to access the differences in the column efficiency under isocratic elution conditions and the resolution of selected peptide pairs under reversed-phase gradient elution conditions for the separation of peptides and proteins. The columns with the pore structural characteristics that provided the most efficient separations are then employed to optimize the conditions of a gradient separation of a model mixture of peptides and proteins based on surface chemistry, gradient time, volumetric flow rate, and acetonitrile concentration. Both the mesopore and macropore diameters of the monolithic column are decisive for the column efficiency. As the diameter of the through-pores decreases, the column efficiency increases. The large set of mesopores studied with a nominal diameter of ∼25 nm provided the most efficient column performance. The efficiency of the monolithic silica columns increase with decreasing n-alkyl chain length in the sequence of C18 < C8 < C4. The resolution of proteins and peptides by reversed-phase gradient liquid chromatography on n-octadecyl, n-octyl, and n-butyl bonded monolithic silica columns is optimized. The results obtained imply the use of acetonitrile concentration gradient up to 75% for n-octadecyl and n-octyl bonded monolithic silica columns, and the use of acetonitrile concentration gradient up to 85% for n-butyl bonded monolithic silica columns. With the respect to the gradient times and flow rates, the optimum conditions are the best with n-octyl and n-butyl bonded monolithic silica columns, where the range of optimum gradient times is up to ∼30 min and mobile phase flow rates in the range of 0.5–1 ml/min. Consequently, the best performance towards peak resolution is obtained with n-octyl bonded monolithic silica column with the respect to low concentration of organic phase gradient, fast separations and low solvent consumptions due to low flow rates.

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J. Vidič, A. Podgornik, J. Jančar, V. Frankovič, B. Košir, N. Lendero, K. Čuček, M. Krajnc, A. Štrancar

Journal of Chromatography A, 1144 (2007) 63–71(2007) 63 – 71

Chemical and chromatographic stability of methacrylate-based monolithic columns bearing 3-N,N-diethylamino-2-hydroxypropyl (DEAE) and quarternary amine (QA) groups was studied. The leakage products from both monolithic columns were determined and the leakage of amines has been quantified in alkali solutions. Monolithic columns bearing QA functional groups being exposed to 1 M sodium hydroxide solution for up to 3 months caused reduction of ion-exchange groups for approximately 12%, while for DEAE monolithic columns was only around 3% in 1 year. In 0.1 M NaOH and 20% ethanol degradation was significantly lower. The main leaking compound from DEAE monolith was found to be 3-(diethylamino)-1,2-propanediol and 2,3-dihydroxypropyltrimethylammonium salt for QA monolith. During repeated 50 cleaning-in-place (CIP) cycles, no changes in chromatographic properties were detected.

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B. A. Grimes, R. Skudas, K. K. Unger, D. Lubda

Journal of Chromatography A, 1144 (2007) 14-29(2007) 14-29

In this work, a parallel pore model (PPM) and a pore network model (PNM) are developed to provide a state-of-art method for the calculation of several characteristic pore structural parameters from inverse size-exclusion chromatography (ISEC) experiments. The proposed PPM and PNM could be applicable to both monoliths and columns packed with porous particles. The PPM and PNM proposed in this work are able to predict the existence of the second inflection point in the experimental exclusion curve that has been observed for monolithic materials by accounting for volume partitioning of the polymer standards in the macropores of the column. The appearance and prominence of the second inflection point in the exclusion curve is determined to depend strongly on the void fraction of the macropores (flow-through pores), (b) the nominal diameter of the macropores, and (c) the radius of gyration of the largest polymer standard employed in the determination of the experimental ISEC exclusion curve. The conditions that dictate the appearance and prominence of the second inflection point in the exclusion curve are presented. The proposed models are applied to experimentally measured ISEC exclusion curves of six silica monoliths having different macropore and mesopore diameters. The PPM and PNM proposed in this work are able to determine the void fractions of the macropores and silica skeleton, the pore connectivity of the mesopores, as well as the pore number distribution (PND) and pore volume distribution (PVD) of the mesopores. The results indicate that the mesoporous structure of all materials studied is well connected as evidenced by the similarities between the PVDs calculated with the PPM and the PNM, and by the high pore connectivity values obtained from the PNM. Due to the fact that the proposed models can predict the existence of the second inflection point in the exclusion curves, the proposed models could be more applicable than other models for ISEC characterization of chromatographic columns with small diameter macropores (interstitial pores) and/or large macropore (interstitial pore) void fractions. It should be noted that the PNM can always be applied without the use of the PPM, since the PPM is an idealization that considers an infinitely connected porous medium and for materials having a low (<6) pore connectivity the PPM would force the PVD to a lower average diameter and larger distribution width as opposed to properly accounting for the network effects present in the real porous medium.

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I. Junkar, T. Koloini, P. Krajnc, D. Nemec, A. Podgornik, A. Štrancar

Journal of Chromatography A, 1144 (2007) 48-54(2007) 48-54

Today, monoliths are well-accepted chromatographic stationary phases due to several advantageous properties in comparison with conventional chromatographic supports. A number of different types of monoliths have already been described, among them recently a poly(high internal phase emulsion) (PolyHIPE) type of chromatographic monoliths. Due to their particular structure, we investigated the possibility of implementing different mathematical models to predict pressure drop on PolyHIPE monoliths. It was found that the experimental results of pressure drop on PolyHIPE monoliths can best be described by employing the representative unit cell (RUC) model, which was originally derived for the prediction of pressure drop on catalytic foams. Models intended for the description of particulate beds and silica monoliths were not as accurate. The results of this study indicate that the PolyHIPE structure under given experimental condition is, from a hydrodynamic point of view, to some extent similar to foam structures, though any extrapolation of these results may not provide useful predictions of pressure versus flow relations and further experiments are required.

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S. Laschober, M. Sulyok, E. Rosenberg

Journal of Chromatography A, 1144 (2007) 55-62(2007) 55-62

The present work aims at the optimisation of the synthesis of methyl-silsesquioxane monolithic capillary columns using a sol–gel based protocol. The influence of reaction conditions such as temperature, reaction mixture composition and catalyst concentration has been examined. The morphology of the products was studied by scanning electron microscopy and nitrogen adsorption. Monolithic capillary columns were obtained with a skeleton-like structure with open pores. Pore diameters vary from 0.8 to 15 μm, diameters of the xerogel network vary from 0.4 to 12 μm, respectively. Specific surface areas up to 334 m2/g have been observed, however, many materials did not possess areas above few m2/g which represents the limit of detection of the nitrogen porosimetry measurements. Excellent adhesion to the capillary wall was observed in all cases, and drying was possible at ambient conditions without the formation of cracks.

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E. Machtejevas, S. Andrecht, D. Lubda, K. K. Unger

Journal of Chromatography A, 1144 (2007) 97-101

The following particulate and monolithic silica columns were implemented in a fully automated and flexible multidimensional LC/MS system with integrated sample clean-up, to perform the analysis of endogeneous peptides from filtered urine and plasma samples: restricted access sulphonic acid strong cation-exchanger (RAM-SCX) for sample clean-up, RP 18 Chromolith guard columns as trap columns and 100 μm I.D. monolithic RP 18 fused silica capillary columns as last LC dimension. The results show sufficient overall system reproducibility and repeatability. Implementation of monolithic silica columns added an additional flexibility with respect to flow rate variation and adjustment due to the low column back pressures. Also, monolithic columns showed a lower clogging rate in long-term usage for biological samples as compared to particulate columns. The applied system set-up was tested to be useful for the routine peptide screening in search of disease biomarkers.

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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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