Effects of concentration on the partitioning of macromolecule mixtures in agarose gels

To test the effects of solute concentration on the equilibrium partitioning of single macromolecules and macromolecule mixtures between bulk solutions and gels, the partition coefficient in agarose was measured for BSA and for four narrow fractions of Ficoll with Stokes radii of 30–59 Å. Solutions o...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of colloid and interface science Vol. 272; no. 2; pp. 288 - 297
Main Authors Lazzara, Matthew J, Deen, William M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published San Diego, CA Elsevier Inc 15.04.2004
Elsevier
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Summary:To test the effects of solute concentration on the equilibrium partitioning of single macromolecules and macromolecule mixtures between bulk solutions and gels, the partition coefficient in agarose was measured for BSA and for four narrow fractions of Ficoll with Stokes radii of 30–59 Å. Solutions of each test macromolecule were equilibrated with a known volume of gel, final liquid concentrations measured, and partition coefficients (gel concentration divided by bulk concentration) calculated by applying a material balance. The partition coefficient of each macromolecule was measured in 4 and 6% gels under dilute conditions and with BSA present at initial concentrations up to 13.5 g/dl. As expected, the partition coefficients decreased with increasing agarose concentration and with increasing macromolecular size. Moreover, increasing the BSA concentration increased the partition coefficient of BSA itself and that of all four Ficolls. This effect was most pronounced for the largest test solutes. Measurements at two ionic strengths confirmed that electrostatic interactions were negligible under the conditions used. The experimental results were compared with predictions from a previously developed excluded volume theory for the partitioning of mixtures of rigid, spheroidal macromolecules in fibrous media. Agarose was represented as a randomly oriented array of cylindrical fibers, BSA as a prolate spheroid, and Ficoll as a sphere. The quantitative agreement between the model predictions and the data was generally quite good, indicating that steric interactions among solute molecules and between solute molecules and gel fibers could explain the partitioning results. The theory is simple enough computationally to be applied to a variety of processes that are influenced by the equilibrium partitioning of macromolecules.
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ISSN:0021-9797
1095-7103
DOI:10.1016/j.jcis.2003.10.008