Immunoaffinity Chromatography
| Abstract |
|
|
Recent developments in recombinant DNA technology have enabled the synthesis of valuable therapeutic proteins in bacterial
cells as well as in novel eucaryotic expression systems. However, the purification of proteins of interest from either the
conventional sources, cell culture, or novel routes in a highly purified form necessitates the development of separation techniques
capable of recovering proteins from these feed streams in a highly purified form (1,2). Purification of therapeutic proteins from biological sources is usually complicated by the presence of endogenous proteins
(2). Purification methodologies based on ion exchange or adsorption serve as excellent prepurification steps, but they fail
to resolve complex protein mixtures to yield a homogeneous protein product (1). Purification techniques based on affinity interactions between molecules (i.e., immunoaffinity chromatography, IAC) have
rapidly evolved using a variety of biological and synthetic ligands (2).
Book Title: Affinity Chromatography: Methods and Protocols
Series: Methods in Molecular Biology | Volume: 147 | Pub. Date: Apr-14-2000 | Page Range: 95-104 | DOI: 10.1007/978-1-60327-261-2_10
Subject: Biochemistry
Comments (Loading...) |
||
Loading... |





















