7 research outputs found
THE RADIAL FOREARM FASCIOCUTANEOUS FREE FLAP IN RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY: A UNIQUE SOLUTION FOR DIFFERENTS PROBLEMS IN DIFFERENTS DISTRICTS OF THE BODY
The ArchaeoGRID e-Infrastructure for Research, Management and Exploitation of Archaeological and Historical Heritage
Combined approach to the analysis of recombinant protein drugs using hollow-fiber flow field-flow fractionation, mass spectrometry and chemiluminescence detection
The impurities present in recombinant protein drugs
produced by large-scale refolding processes can not only
affect the product safety but also interact with the expressed
protein. To relate the impurity profile to conformation
and functionality of the protein drug, analytical
methods able not to degrade the sample components
should be preferred. In this work, an urate oxidase
(uricase) drug from Aspergillus flavus expressed in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and a reagent-grade uricase
from Candida sphaerica expressed in Escherichia coli,
are analyzed by combining hollow-fiber flow field-flow
fractionation with matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization
time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI/TOFMS)
and with chemiluminescence enzyme activity assay. Preliminary
detection and identification of sample impurities
is performed by means of conventional methods such as
RP HPLC with electrospray ionization quadrupole-TOF
MS and MALDI/TOFMS with SDS PAGE and 2D SDS
PAGE. Results show that the recombinant uricase samples
obtained from different microorganisms have different
impurities and different enzymatic activity and that different
uricase oligomers are present in solution
