Protein crystal occurrence domains in selective protein crystallisation for bio-separation

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Abstract

Bio-separation is a key bottleneck in the manufacture of biopharmaceuticals. In this work, we report experimental evidence of direct selective protein crystallisation from a binary protein mixture solution. Lysozyme-thaumatin mixtures with a wide protein composition range (0-100 mg mL-1, respectively) were tested under the same crystallisation cocktail conditions using the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion (HDVD) crystallisation method. This work demonstrates the selectivity of crystallisation from a model binary protein mixture and four crystal occurrence domains were determined as the operation windows of selective crystallisation of the target protein: 1) an unsaturated region with no crystal formation, 2 & 3) target regions with only a single type of protein crystals (lysozyme crystals only or thaumatin crystals only) and 4) a mixture region which have a mixture of both types of protein. This study demonstrates that protein crystallisation is not only applicable to high-purity protein solutions and emphasizes the vital impacts of the presence of protein impurities in the process of target protein crystallisation. The study concludes that protein crystallisation is a feasible approach to separate a target protein from a complex mixture environment which can be achieved by manipulating the crystallisation operation conditions such as mixture composition, precipitant concentration, and operation time. This journal is

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Li, X., Chen, W., Yang, H., Yang, Z., & Heng, J. Y. Y. (2020). Protein crystal occurrence domains in selective protein crystallisation for bio-separation. CrystEngComm, 22(27), 4566–4572. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0ce00642d

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