Roger Epton (Ed.), Chromatography of synthetic and biological polymers, volume 1, column packings, gel permeation chromatography, gel filtration, and gradient elution

1979 ◽  
Vol 104 (2) ◽  
pp. 404-405
Author(s):  
D.M.W. Anderson
1978 ◽  
Vol 175 (3) ◽  
pp. 1051-1067 ◽  
Author(s):  
K K Mäkinen ◽  
P L Mäkinen

Two arylamidases (I and II) were purified from human erythrocytes by a procedure that comprised removal of haemoglobin from disrupted cells with CM-Sephadex D-50, followed by treatment of the haemoglobin-free preparation subsequently with DEAE-cellulose, gel-permeation chromatography on Sephadex G-200, gradient solubilization on Celite, isoelectric focusing in a pH gradient from 4 to 6, gel-permeation chromatography on Sephadex G-100 (superfine), and finally affinity chromatography on Sepharose 4B covalently coupled to L-arginine. In preparative-scale purifications, enzymes I and II were separated at the second gel-permeation chromatography. Enzyme II was obtained as a homogeneous protein, as shown by several criteria. Enzyme I hydrolysed, with decreasing rates, the L-amino acid 2-naphtylamides of lysine, arginine, alanine, methionine, phenylalanine and leucine, and the reactions were slightly inhibited by 0.2 M-NaCl. Enzyme II hydrolysed most rapidly the corresponding derivatives of arginine, leucine, valine, methionine, proline and alanine, in that order, and the hydrolyses were strongly dependent on Cl-. The hydrolysis of these substrates proceeded rapidly at physiological Cl- concentration (0.15 M). The molecular weights (by gel filtration) of enzymes I and II were 85 000 and 52 500 respectively. The pH optimum was approx. 7.2 for both enzymes. The isoelectric point of enzyme II was approx. 4.8. Enzyme I was activated by Co2+, which did not affect enzyme II to any noticeable extent. The kinetics of reactions catalysed by enzyme I were characterized by strong substrate inhibition, but enzyme II was not inhibited by high substrate concentrations. The Cl- activated enzyme II also showed endopeptidase activity in hydrolysing bradykinin.


2020 ◽  
Vol 85 (5) ◽  
pp. 609-622
Author(s):  
Bestoon Shaikhan ◽  
Kemal Güven ◽  
Fatma Bekler ◽  
Ömer Acer ◽  
Reyhan Güven

Enterobacter sp. 3TP2A isolated from a petroleum station was found to produce a novel, highly inducible mesophilic intracellular ?-galactosidase in the presence of lactose up to 76.5 U mg-1. The enzyme was purified to 17.3- -fold after gel permeation chromatography with a yield of approximately 11 %. The optimum pH and temperature values of the purified enzyme were found to be 8.0?9.0 and 35 ?C, respectively. The molecular weight of the enzyme was approx. 60 kDa with a single band by both SDS-PAGE and native-PAGE, and estimated by gel filtration chromatography. The enzyme was inhibited by Zn2+ and EDTA, while Cu2+ had strong inhibitory effect even at low concentrations. Activation by Mg2+ and inhibition by EDTA show that the enzyme is metal- -dependent or a metalloenzyme. The enzyme was slightly activated by 2-mercaptoethanol, while slightly inhibited by iodoacetamide. On the other hand, PCMB inhibited the enzymatic activity to a great extent, whereas it was completely inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide. The Vmax and Km values were calculated as 0.701 ?mol min-1 and 0.104 mM, respectively. The results indicated that the ?-galactosidase Enterobacter sp. 3TP2A might well be a good candidate for use in biotechnology, particularly in the area of environment and health.


1998 ◽  
Vol 81 (5) ◽  
pp. 1048-1053 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Sannino

Abstract A liquid chromatographic method for quantitative determination of 9 phenylurea herbicide residues (metoxuron, metobromuron, monolinuron, chlortoluron, isoproturon, diuron, linuron, chloroxuron, and neburon) in potatoes, carrots, and mixed vegetables is described. Samples are extracted with acetone, partitioned with ethyl acetate-cyclohexane (50 + 50, v/v) and cleaned up by gel permeation chromatography with ethyl acetate-cyclohexane (50 + 50, v/v) as eluant. A small column (1 cm id) packed with Biobeads SX3 resin is used to reduce solvent consumption and analytical time. After solid-phase extraction on a Florisil cartridge, herbicide residues are successfully separated on a C18 column by gradient elution and determined by UV detection at 242 nm. Average recoveries of 9 compounds from different samples range from 70 to 98% at 0.010 and 0.100 mg/kg fortification levels. Quantitation limits are 0.010 mg/kg


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