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An integrated practical implementation of continuous aqueous two‐phase systems for the recovery of human IgG: From the microdevice to a multistage bench‐scale mixer‐settler device
Author(s) -
EspitiaSaloma Edith,
VâzquezVillegas Patricia,
RitoPalomares Marco,
Aguilar Oscar
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
biotechnology journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.144
H-Index - 84
eISSN - 1860-7314
pISSN - 1860-6768
DOI - 10.1002/biot.201400565
Subject(s) - polyethylene glycol , chromatography , peg ratio , microfluidics , context (archaeology) , extraction (chemistry) , aqueous solution , computer science , process engineering , chemistry , materials science , nanotechnology , engineering , biochemistry , paleontology , finance , economics , biology
Aqueous two‐phase systems (ATPS) are a liquid‐liquid extraction technology with clear process benefits; however, its lack of industrial embracement is still a challenge to overcome. Antibodies are a potential product to be recovered by ATPS in a commercial context. The objective of this work is to present a more integral approach of the different isolated strategies that have arisen in order to enable a practical, generic implementation of ATPS, using human immunoglobulin G (IgG) as experimental model. A microfluidic device is used for ATPS parameters preselection for product recovery. ATPS were continuously operated in a mixer‐settler device in one stage, multistage and multistage with recirculation configuration. Single‐stage pure IgG extraction with a polyethylene glycol (PEG) 3350‐phophates ATPS within continuous operation allowed a 65% recovery. Further implementation of a multistage platform promoted a higher particle partitioning reaching a 90% recovery. The processing of IgG from a cell supernatant culture harvest in a multistage system with top phase recirculation resulted in 78% IgG recovery in bottom phase. This work conjugates three not widely spread methodologies for ATPS: microfluidics, continuous and multistage operation.
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