4.7 Article

Screening polymeric ionic liquids for chromatography-based purification of bacteriophage M13

Journal

SEPARATION AND PURIFICATION TECHNOLOGY
Volume 257, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.seppur.2020.117906

Keywords

Polymeric ionic liquids; Bacteriophage M13; Batch adsorption; Chromatography; Anion-exchange

Funding

  1. Fundacao para Ciencia e Tecnologia (FCT) [PD/BD/105883/2014, SFRH/BD/97042/2013]
  2. program Investigador FCT 2014 [IF/00048/2014/CP1214/CT0010]
  3. research project PureMAb [PTDC/QEQ-PRS/0286/2014, UID/BIO/04565/2013]
  4. Centro de Quimica Estrutural [UID/QUI/00100/2013]
  5. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [PD/BD/105883/2014, SFRH/BD/97042/2013] Funding Source: FCT

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M13 bacteriophage is a key tool in phage display applications and a potential antibacterial therapeutic agent. Traditional phage purification methods have limitations, leading to the exploration of electrostatic-based separation processes using polymeric ionic liquids (PIL). This study demonstrated a successful chromatographic operation mode for M13 purification with high yield and purity.
M13 bacteriophage is a key instrument in phage display applications, as well as a possible antibacterial therapeutic agent due to its highly restrictive bacterial pathogenesis, and other applications. The traditional phage purification process is usually achieved by gradient ultracentrifugation or a combination of precipitation, centrifugation and microfiltration. These approaches easily lead to long process times, high operational costs, phage aggregation and consequent product loss (approximately 60%). This work is thus focused on an alternative potential large-scale process to achieve high yield and purity while minimizing the operational costs. Electrostatic-based separation processes are also common biomolecules purification techniques. Although anion exchange chromatography has been used before to purify several viral particles, this technique has been poorly reported for the purification of M13 phage. In a recent work, our group has demonstrated the use of a predominant anion exchange process, where a polymeric ionic liquid (PIL) was used as an alternative separation matrix for M13 bacteriophage. In this work, a variety of system parameters was studied, including chemical structure of the cation and the anion, the crosslinker nature and its concentration, either in batch adsorption/elution or chromatographic operation mode. The PIL-based chromatographic operation mode revealed to be a suitable separation process for M13 from directly filtered E. coli supernatant, reaching over 70% M13 recovery and 4.6 purification factor in a single step. To our knowledge, this is the first time that PILs have been reported as separation agents for bioproducts from complex mixtures.

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