by
Rande » Wed Sep 12, 2007 1:54 am
did you mean "Capto MMC" (with a C)
Stefan,
Yes, it looks like that was a typo - I was refering to Capto MMC. I have not worked with this resin, but from the literature available - it seems similar to the MEP HyperCel (Hydrophobic charge induction resin).
I am ultimately aiming at using the resin in a displacement mode
Do you really mean "Displacement Chromatography"? Such as eluting with a charged polymer like dextran sulfate or a highly charged ion (or do you mean "flow through mode")? Displacement Chromatography is very interesting, and I have played with it a little. Unfortunately, most of the displacement chromatography I have done, was by accident with very unexpected results.
Quick story from a previous job: Purification process for a monoclonal antibody with minimal development before scale up. Initial capture was on protein A with citrate elution buffer. Next step was polishing on Q sepharose. We decided that instead of a buffer exchange, we could just dilute the protein A elution pool and it would bind to the Q. This worked OK at small scale with a light load, but on scale up - we had a sudden elution peak during the product load. This was lost into the large volume of flow through waste. We later determined that during loading, both citrate and antibody were binding to the Q resin. When the resin got close to capacity – the citrate had a stronger affinity and displaced the protein.
There is a reason why you are supposed to use a cationic buffer with anion exchange resins!!
Sorry if I got side-tracked from your original question, but hopefully someone will learn from my mistakes. That is what a forum like this is all about.