24 research outputs found

    Composite cellulose fibre for affinity chromatography application

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    Affinity chromatographic supports is nowadays one of the most used and expensive consumable material for protein purification at the laboratory and industrial scale. The introduction of cost-effective materials is an important issue to address to spread the usefulness of this technology. Cotton fibres are a highly available natural material with excellent mechanical and structural properties which can be used for this propose. Nevertheless, fibre insolubility and low chemical reactivity are the major drawbacks to use this material for protein chromatography.In this work, a composite material prepared from polymethacrylate/cellulose fibres were used for the preparation of chromatographic materials containing immobilised proteins as adsorptive ligands. A green fluorescent protein and a protein A simil ligand containing cysteine in the terminal tags were immobilised onto the fibres by the epoxy-thiol chemistry. Buffer salt, pH, reaction time and pre-swelling procedure were optimised. Materials were characterised by fluorescence and electron microscopes, in addition to the binding capacity of the adsorbent materials.Fil: Carbajal, Maria Laura. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂ­fico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB | Provincia de Buenos Aires. GobernaciĂłn. ComisiĂłn de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB | Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB; ArgentinaFil: Kikot, Pamela Alejandra. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂ­fico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB | Provincia de Buenos Aires. GobernaciĂłn. ComisiĂłn de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB | Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB; ArgentinaFil: Torchio, Gabriela MarĂ­a. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂ­fico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB | Provincia de Buenos Aires. GobernaciĂłn. ComisiĂłn de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB | Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB; ArgentinaFil: Fernandez Lahore, M.. Universitat Bremen. School of Enigineerring and Science Jacobs; AlemaniaFil: Grasselli, Mariano. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂ­fico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB | Provincia de Buenos Aires. GobernaciĂłn. ComisiĂłn de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB | Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Grupo Vinculado al IMBICE - Grupo de BiologĂ­a Estructural y BiotecnologĂ­a - Universidad Nacional de Quilmes - GBEyB; Argentin

    The influence of cell adsorbent interactions on protein adsorption in expanded beds

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    Expanded bed adsorption (EBA) is a primary recovery operation allowing the adsorption of proteins directly from unclarified feedstock, e.g. culture suspensions, homogenates or crude extracts. Thus solid-liquid separation is combined with adsorptive purification in a single step. The concept of integration requires that the solid components of the feed solution are regarded as a part of the process, which influences stability, reproducibility, and overall performance. This aspect is investigated here at the example of the influence of presence and concentration of intact yeast cells (S. cerevisiae) on the adsorption of model proteins (hen egg white lysozyme and bovine serum albumin) to various stationary phases (cation and anion-exchange, hydrophobic interaction, immobilised metal affinity). The interaction of the cells with the adsorbents is determined qualitatively and quantitatively by a pulse response method as well as by a finite bath technique under different operating conditions. The consequence of these interactions for the stability of expanded beds in suspensions of varying cell concentration is measured by residence time distributions (RTDs) after tracer pulse injection (NaBr, LiCl). Analysis of the measured RTD by the PDE model allows the calculation of the fraction of perfectly fluidised bed (φ), a parameter which may be regarded as a critical quantity for the estimation of the quality of fluidisation of adsorbents in cell containing suspensions. The correlation between bed stability and performance is made by analysing the breakthrough of model proteins during adsorption from unclarified yeast culture broth. A clear relationship is found between the degree of cell/adsorbent interaction, bed stability in terms of the φ parameter, and the sorption efficiency. Only beds characterised by a φ; value larger than 0.8 in the presence of cells will show a conserved performance compared to adsorption from cell free solutions. A drop in φ, which is due to interactions of the fluidised adsorbent particles with cells from the feed, will directly result in a reduced breakthrough efficiency. The data presented highlight the importance of including the potential interaction of solid feedstock components and the expanded adsorbents into the design of EBA processes, as the interrelation found here is a key factor for the overall performance of EBA as a truly integrated operation. © 2000 Elsevier Science B.V.Fil: Fernandez Lahore, Hector. Universitat Dusseldorf; Alemania. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas; ArgentinaFil: Geilenkirchen, S.. Universitat Dusseldorf; AlemaniaFil: Boldt, K.. Universitat Dusseldorf; AlemaniaFil: Nagel, A.. Universitat Dusseldorf; AlemaniaFil: Kula, M. R.. Universitat Dusseldorf; AlemaniaFil: Thömmes, J.. Universitat Dusseldorf; Alemani

    Emerging technologies for the integration and intensification of downstream bioprocesses

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    Downstream processing is currently the major bottleneck for bioproduct generation. In contrast to the advances in fermentation processes, the tools used for downstream processes have struggled to keep pace in the last 20 years. Purification bottlenecks are quite serious, as these processes can account for up to 80% of the total production cost. Coupled with the emergence of new classes of bioproducts, for example, virus-like particles or plasmidic DNA, this has created a great need for superior alternatives. In this review, improved downstream technologies, including aqueous two-phase systems, expanded bed adsorption chromatography, convective flow systems, and fibre-based adsorbent systems, have been discussed. These adaptive methods are more suited to the burgeoning downstream processing needs of the future, enabling the cost-efficient production of new classes biomaterials with a high degree of purity, and thereby hold the promise to become indispensable tools in the pharmaceutical and food industries.Fil: D’Souza, Roy N.. Universitat Bremen; AlemaniaFil: Azevedo, Ana M.. Universidad de Lisboa; PortugalFil: Aires Barros, M. Raquel. Universidad de Lisboa; PortugalFil: Krajnc, Nika Lendero. BIA Separations; EsloveniaFil: Kramberger, Petra. BIA Separations; EsloveniaFil: Carbajal, Maria Laura. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂ­fico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Provincia de Buenos Aires. GobernaciĂłn. ComisiĂłn de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular; ArgentinaFil: Grasselli, Mariano. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂ­fico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Provincia de Buenos Aires. GobernaciĂłn. ComisiĂłn de Investigaciones CientĂ­ficas. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular. Universidad Nacional de La Plata. Instituto Multidisciplinario de BiologĂ­a Celular; ArgentinaFil: Meyer, Ronald. Universitat Bremen; AlemaniaFil: Fernandez Lahore, Marcelo. Universitat Bremen; Alemani

    Therapy targeting antigen-specific T cells by a peptide-based tolerizing vaccine against autoimmune arthritis

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    A longstanding goal has been to find an antigen-specific preventive therapy, i.e., a vaccine, for autoimmune diseases. It has been difficult to find safe ways to steer the targeting of natural regulatory antigen. Here, we show that the administration of exogenous mouse major histocompatibility complex class II protein bounding a unique galactosylated collagen type II (COL2) peptide (Aq-galCOL2) directly interacts with the antigen-specific TCR through a positively charged tag. This leads to expanding a VISTA-positive nonconventional regulatory T cells, resulting in a potent dominant suppressive effect and protection against arthritis in mice. The therapeutic effect is dominant and tissue specific as the suppression can be transferred with regulatory T cells, which downregulate various autoimmune arthritis models including antibody-induced arthritis. Thus, the tolerogenic approach described here may be a promising dominant antigen-specific therapy for rheumatoid arthritis, and in principle, for autoimmune diseases in general.Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (2019-0059)Swedish Research Council (2019-1209, 2017-06014)Swedish Association against RheumatismErling Persson Foundation (2017-10-09)German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (GO-Bio-project aidCURE; 031A385)Federal State of Hesse (LOEWE-project 13, IME Fraunhofer Project Group TMP at Goethe University)Fraunhofer Cluster of Excellence for Immune-Mediated Diseases CIMDSpanish Ministry of Universities through the European Union (NextGeneration EU)Publishe

    Outcomes from elective colorectal cancer surgery during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic

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    This study aimed to describe the change in surgical practice and the impact of SARS-CoV-2 on mortality after surgical resection of colorectal cancer during the initial phases of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic

    Development of a transformation system for Aspergillus sojae based on the Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated approach

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    Background: Aspergillus sojae has been an important filamentous fungus in Biotechnology due to its use in diverse fermentative processes for the production of various food products. Furthermore, this fungus is a common expression system for the production of enzymes and other metabolites. The availability of molecular genetic tools to explore its biology is thus of big interest. In this study, an Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation (ATMT) system for A. sojae was developed and its applicability evaluated. Results: The donor plasmid named pRM-eGFP was constructed for ATMT of A. sojae. This plasmid contains the ble and egfp genes in its transfer DNA element (T-DNA) to confer phleomycin resistance and express the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) in A. sojae, respectively. Agrobacterium tumefaciens (LBA4404) harboring the donor plasmid and A. sojae (ATCC 20235) were co-cultured under diverse conditions to achieve ATMT. The maximum number of transformed fungi was obtained after three days of co-culturing at 28 degrees C, and selection with 50 mu g/ml phleomycin. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR), fluorescence microscopy and Western Blot analysis for EGFP expression confirmed successful genomic integration of the T-DNA element in A. sojae. The T-DNA was mitotically stable in approximately 40% of the fungal transformants after four generations of sub-culturing under phleomycin pressure. Conclusion: We successfully established a new ATMT protocol for A. sojae. This transformation system should enable further protein expression studies on this filamentous fungus
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