Premium
Separation and quantification of double‐ and triple‐layered rotavirus‐like particles by CZE
Author(s) -
CastroAcosta Ricardo M.,
Revilla Alma L.,
Ramírez Octavio T.,
Palomares Laura A.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
electrophoresis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.666
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1522-2683
pISSN - 0173-0835
DOI - 10.1002/elps.200900558
Subject(s) - analyte , rotavirus , chromatography , capillary electrophoresis , chemistry , characterization (materials science) , nat , particle (ecology) , virus like particle , recombinant dna , quantitative proteomics , materials science , virus , analytical chemistry (journal) , nanotechnology , biology , virology , proteomics , computer science , biochemistry , computer network , ecology , gene
Virus‐like particles have been successfully used as safe vaccines, as their structure is identical to their native counterparts but devoid of the viral genetic material. However, production of these complex structures is not easy, as recombinant proteins must assemble into virus‐like particles. Techniques to differentiate assembled and soluble proteins, as well as assembly intermediaries often present in a sample, are required. An example of complex virus‐like particles mixture occurs when rotavirus proteins are recombinantly expressed. Rotavirus‐like particles (RLP) can be single (sl), double (dl), or triple layered (tl). The use of RLP preparations as vaccines requires their complete characterization, including separation and quantification of each RLP in a sample. In this work, CZE was evaluated for the separation and quantification of dl and triple‐layered rotavirus‐like particles (tlRLP). A fused‐silica capillary with a deoxycholate running buffer efficiently separated dl and tlRLP in RLP preparations, as they migrated in two discrete peaks with electrophoretic mobilities of 1.24±0.04 and 2.95±0.03 Ti, respectively. Standard curves for dl and tlRLP were generated, and the response was linearly proportional to analyte concentration. The methodology developed was quantitative, specific, accurate, precise, and reproducible. CZE allowed the quantitative characterization of RLP preparations, which is required for evaluation of immunogens, for process development, and for quality control protocols.