4.5 Article

Antibodies purification from human plasma using fractionation, chromatography and gel electrophoresis assisted by multivariate analysis of complimentary absorption and fluorescence spectra

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jchromb.2021.122526

Keywords

Antibody; Ethanol precipitation; Ion exchange chromatography; UV?Vis absorbance; EEM fluorescence; MCR-ALS; PARAFAC

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In this study, antibodies like Immunoglobulin G were purified from human plasma using simple precipitation and weak anion exchange chromatography techniques. The chromatographic fractions were analyzed using Multivariate Curve Resolution-Alternating Least Squares (MCR-ALS) and Parallel Factor Analysis (PARAFAC) to provide information about the existing protein and non-protein components in each fraction. The results demonstrated the importance of multivariate analysis and complementary information for better interpretation of such biochemically complex systems.
Employing simple precipitation (fractionation) using Cohn method and weak anion exchange chromatography with DEAE resin, antibodies such as Immunoglobulin G are purified from human plasma. Fractions are eluted from column in four different regions depending on washing NaCl concentrations. Absorbance and excitation emission fluorescence spectral data are measured for separated chromatographic fractions and analyzed using Multivariate Curve Resolution-Alternating Least Squares (MCR-ALS) and Parallel Factor Analysis (PARAFAC) techniques. Resolved concentration and spectral profiles provided information about existing components in each fraction. Protein and non-protein components are distinguished considering their resolved pure spectra and information from the two applied spectroscopic techniques is complementary. A number of components displayed both fluorescence and absorbance signals. When concentration of component (protein or non-protein) in sample is low and no significant absorbance signal is observed, sensitive fluorescence is useful to recognize the component and for non-fluorescent components absorbance spectra are utilized. Electrophoresis is utilized for separation of proteins in each fraction and showed that one distinguished protein from fluorescence and/or absorbance data can be a group of proteins with similar pure spectra and retention volume. Results showed presence of two protein in the first region (IgM and IgA), a group of proteins in second region (IgM, ?-globulin, and IgG), a pure protein in third region (IgG), and a group of ?-globulin proteins in fifth region. It is well and clearly shown that multivariate analysis of different data sets with complementary information is necessary for better interpretation of such technically simple and biochemically complicated systems.

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