Bio-Rad Foresight™ Chromatography Columns, Prepacked User Manual

Page 20

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Csalt (M)

C

0

(mg/mL)

1

2

3

… 10 11 12

C

1

A

C

2

B

C

3

C

C

4

D

C

5

E

C

6

F

C

7

G

C

8

H

(A)

Csalt

1

Csalt

4

C

0

(mg/mL)

C

1

C

2

C

3

… C

10

C

11

C

12

Salt (M)

1

2

3

… 10 11 12

A
B
C

D

E

F

G
H

(B)

Csalt

1

Csalt

2

Fig. 3. Schematic representation of the plate
configuration for isotherm experiments using a fixed
phase ratio, and variable initial solute concentration
(C

0

). A, configuration suitable for an 8-channel pipet;

B, configuration suitable for a 12-channel pipet. This
example suggests performing three replicates for each salt
concentration.

3.2.3 Binding Kinetics

This type of study is useful for defining

the contact time of the batch adsorption

experiment. For a fixed phase ratio and initial

solute concentration, the contact time dictates

how much solute will bind to the media. If

there is enough sample and time, it is best to

perform the binding kinetic study using two

sufficiently distinct initial solute concentrations.

This is especially useful if no isotherm data

are available. The longest incubation time for

uptake experiments is usually 60 minutes,

meaning equilibrium is not reached, especially

for macromolecules such as proteins and

antibodies. Figure 4 shows the loading sequence

(Figure 4A) and media plate configuration (Figure

4B) for the uptake experiments.

A

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