by 
danko » Mon Feb 18, 2008 11:21 pm
													
 
						
																																																									
					 
					
						One can run really nice chromatography for peptides at alkaline pH with equivalent retention as at acidic pH As I mentioned above, I have not tested this for proteins, but I do not see a reason why it should not work as well as under acidic conditions with TFA.
Hi Uwe,
The reason is as described under my second point (previous post); the ionized carboxylic acid functional groups to be found in any protein.
If everything’s equal, the low pH conditions will result in longer protein retention compared to the high pH ditto. I’ve worked with proteins for years and I’ve tested many cases. F. ex. you can try phosphate buffer at pH 2.3 and 7.2 – same concentration e.g. 0.05 M. Please choose a protein with pI away from 7, for this means trouble. A good test candidate would be human growth hormone (pI = 5.2). You’ll need at least twice as much ACN to elute it at pH 2.3 compared to pH 7.2. The same goes for all other proteins I’ve tested and they are many.
Regarding the modern world: I’ve joined it already – I use ACE, Xbridge, poroshell, biosuite, Jupiter and many, many other modern columns. Actually sometimes, the so called older materials can prove to be very valuable indeed with respect to selectivity. As I use to say: The right column is the one that works for the compound of interest. Different silicas provide different selectivity and this is especially true in the case of protein separation. I’m sure we can agree on the importance of selectivity 
 
Best Regards