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Bioseparation Engineering Young Je Yoo Biotechnology built on the genetic manipulation of organisms to produce commercial products or processes Biochemical Engineering responsible for the implementation of the products and processes Two Disciplines of Biochemical Engineering Upstream Engineering (Fermentation/Cell Culture) Downstream Engineering (Bioseparation or Purification) Figure 1. Relation between starting product concentration in completed broth or medium, and final selling price of the prepared product (Dwyer JL, 1984). Figure 2. Primary factors affecting separation vs. particle size (Atkinson B and Mavituna F, 1983) Separation Process Design • mimic similar processes/cases • new concept process Separation Process Synthesis Scale-up is to be considered. *design software *information from equipment vendors Criteria for Process Design Used in evaluating and designing bioseparation process • product value, purity, impurities acceptable • cost of production as related to yield • scalability • robustness with respect to process stream variables • easy maintenance Scale-up • Filtration • Distillation • Electrophoresis Stages of Bioseparation: An idealized process (1)removal of solids (or recovery), (2)isolation of product, (3)purification, and (4)polishing constitute a sequence of events applied to nearly every product preparation Table 1. Objectives and Typical Unit Operations of the Four Stages in Bioseparation (Harrison et al., 2003) Stage Objective(s) Typical Unit Operations Separation of Remove or collect cells, cell debris, or other Filtration, sedimentation, insolubles particulates extraction, adsorption Reduce volume (depends on unit operation) Isolation of product Remove materials having properties widely different from those desired in product Reduce volume (depends on unit operation) Extraction, adsorption, ultrafiltration, precipitation Purification Remove remaining impurities, which typically are similar to the desired product in chemical functionality and physical properties Chromatography, affinity methods, crystallization, fractional precipitation Polishing Remove liquids Convert the product to crystalline form (not always possible) Drying, crystallization • Intracellular, extracellular product ? • Fermentation – broth components ? • In situ separation with fermentation (Ex : ethanol, antibiotics, taxol) • Separation for next step ? (Ex : lactic acid for polymer) Protein Purification Protein Purification Processes Final product requirement – define (99% ~ 99.999%) Process design approaches • Follow examples • Modify the process (new concept can be introduced) Rule 1. Based on different physical, chemical, biochemical properties 2. Separate the most plentiful impurities, first 3. Differences in physicochemical properties 4. High resolution 5. Most difficult step, last Protein Purification Processes 1. Cell separation 2. Cell disruption, debris separation (for intracellular protein) 3. Concentration 4. High resolution purification 5. Polishing of final product Efficiency: 0.9 for each step is assumed after 6 ~ 7 steps → total yield ≈ 0.2 • increase yield/efficiency is very essential • refolding is important Protein Extracellular protein (secreted): easy to separate Inclusion body: cell disruption → centrifuge solubilization → refolding - chromatography Inclusion body is formed by overexpression in E. coli. Advantages of Inclusion Body • not breakable with protease • not toxic to cells • high expression In general, economical What to remove? - cell debris, endotoxin, other proteins, nucleic acid - deaminated form, oxidized form, dimer form of the product protein - need more than 3 steps of chromatography Protein Purification Processes 1. Cell Harvest by Centrifugation - Continuous disk stack type or batch centrifuge - tangential flow microfiltration (M/F) 2. Cell Disruption - French press, lysozyme, ultrasonification or bead mill E. coli: mainly high pressure homogenizer 2 – 3 times for high efficiency Yeast: strong cell wall → bead mill 3. Solubilization of Inclusion Body Inclusion body: can be obtained at 60 – 70% purity Denaturing Agent (chaotropic agent) Urea, guanidine HCL, NaOH (high pH) In case of urea, it should have no cyanate. protein + cyanate → carbamylation occurs Guanidine: good but expensive So, 7 – 8 M urea is widely used. If disulfide bond exists in protein, add mercaptoethanol, DTT (dithiothreitol) or cysteine → reduce disulfide bond to free thiol Add 1-2 mM EDTA to reduce metalloprotease activity. After solubilization, viscous solution containing the following is obtained. 70% of target protein, cell debris, DNA, endotoxin, 7 – 8 M urea, 50 – 100 mM cystein, 1 – 2 mM EDTA • Host which has no protease is used. • Short processing time is required. 4. Capture Impurities For large volume, short time → chromatography If histidine tag exists → IMAC (immobilized metal affinity chromatography) If no histidine tag → urea → ion-exchange chromatography After this process, solution having the following is obtained. target protein (1 – 5 mg/ml), small impurities, 7 – 8 M urea, 50 – 100 mM cystein, 1 – 2 mM EDTA, pH 7.9 – 9.0 buffer 5. Refolding - Remove denaturant method: dialysis, diafiltration - Refolding is being performed at low concentration (0.1 – 0.5 g/L) to prevent protein aggregation 6. Purification - IEC, IMAC, HIC HIC: hydroxyapatite chromatography - diafiltration or gel permeation chromatography for desalting (to exchange buffer solution) 7. Polishing - Remove dimer, polymer, endotoxin - Use chromatography - After polishing → filtration using 0.2μ filter to remove bacteria Protein from mammalian cell - secreted form - inactivate virus, virus removal process is required To prevent protein oxidation - operation under nitrogen gas low temperature is preferred Evaluation of Separation and Purification Processes in Antibiotic Industry Conventional separation technologies Two main processing segments; • fermentation section • separation and purification section All antibiotic fermentations use similar equipment, while different antibiotics are produced by using different cultures and growth media. The separation and purification sections of an antibiotic plant can differ substantially depending on the specific antibiotic that is being produced and enduse purity requirements. Filtration, centrifugation, extraction, and crystallization are generally employed. Penicillin With proper strain selection penicillin can be produced in concentrations up to 40 g/L, which is one or two orders of magnitude greater than many other antibiotics. Cephalosporin broad-spectrum antibiotics that have low toxicity. They are produced by the same process used for the penicillins, utilizing a different growth medium and organisms. The final fermentation broth concentrations are one to two orders of magnitude lower than penicillin, resulting in a more difficult separation and purification process. (CPC) • Recovery of cephalosporin from the filtrate is difficult because of the low product concentration and the need to remove high molecular weight biological compounds. • During biosynthesis of CPC, the formation of the synthesizing enzyme is sequentially induced in the metabolic pathway. It is therefore necessary to separate/isolate the enzymes. General production scheme for penicillin fermentation Penicillin, growth media, cell, other metabolites filtration Removal of cells →penicillin rich filtrate cooling Minimization of degradation Solvent extraction Using aqueous solution at pH2-2.5 and organic solvent Penicillin is favor in organic solvents because of their protonation form. Carbon-treatment Removal of pigments and other impurities Extraction using pH 7.5 aqueous solution Back into an aqueous solution crystallization Adding sodium or potassium acetate Washing, drying Using vacuum or warm air General production scheme for cephalosporin • Many different separation and purification schemes are employed, including conventional solvent extraction, ion exchange resins, and salting out procedures. Adding water and a polar organic solvent Fermentation Filtration Adsorption W/ active C Anion exchange Adding salt solution • Frequently, the carbon adsorption steps are replaced with a precipitation step. Many different precipitations are possible. 1. Crystallization of the potassium or sodium salt from purified aqueous solution of the cephalosporin by concentration and/or addition of large volumes of a miscible solvent. 2. The zinc salt (also copper, nickel, lead, cadmium, cobalt, iron, and manganese) can be crystallized from purified aqueous solutions. 3. Insoluble derivatives such as the n-2,4-dichlorobenzoyl cephalosporin and tetrabromocarboxybenzoyl cephalosporin are crystallized as the acid from solution. 4. Sodium-2-ethyl hexanoate will precipitate the sodium salt of N-derivatized cephalosporins from solvents. Isomerization This is biologically inactive. Difficult to isolate and purify due to a highly polar side-chain. Separation Process Synthesis Ex : Penicillin Production Figure 3. Penicillin production. After fermentation the biomass is separated by filtration. The antibiotic, which is in the filtrate, is isolated and purified by extraction. It is then polished by crystallization and dried. Separation Process Synthesis Increasing amount of washing water increases recovery but thus the amount of wastewater generated Vacuum Filter Temperature: material degradation and yield Solvent: type of solvent, solvent to water ratio Mode of Operation: Single or multiple stage Extraction Optimization of operating condition is essential!! Are there other novel concepts of separation??? New concept for Separation of Pen-G Broth Microfiltration Ultrafiltration Biomass Solvent Reverse Osmosis Figure 4. Possible alternative scheme for penicillin purification. Product (Penicillin G) Protein Stability and Formulation Protein Formulation/Stability Test Formulation: → Storage stability before use (1.5 ~ 2 years) → Add stabilizer and bulking agent → 0.22 μ filter (for sterilization) → Packing , or → Freeze drying (lyophilization) → powder packing Stable Protein → liquid–form product Unstable Protein → solid–form product Protein Formulation/Stability Test Stabilizer: → human serum albumin lowers glass wall attachment → amino acid • lowers lysozyme attachment to glass wall • lowers globulin aggregation → polyol (sorbitol, glycerol, mannitol) use for lyophilization → antioxidant, salt and surfactant Protein Stability: Model unfolding inactivation N↔U→I reversible irreversible where: N – native (folded) U – unfolded I – inactivated Thermodynamic (conformational) stability Long-term (kinetic) stability Protein Stability: Thermodynamics Gibb’s Free Energy Gu Gu G f relatively stable, when ∆Gu is big. G Gu wild Gu mutant 0 Folding Stability Measurement Optical UV Fluorescence CD (circular dichroism) Molecular Size Change viscosity light scattering turbidity Net Charge Change gel electrophoresis HPLC Aggregation Stability: Experiment Assume: A ↔ B (linear) Stability: Experiment N↔U Equilibirum constant U Kf N G f RT ln K f ΔG in the absence of denaturant Can be estimated by molecular modeling Case study Human Growth Hormone Ref : “Directed expression in Escherichia coli of a DNA sequence coding for human growth hormone”, Goeddel, D.V. et al., Nature 281:544 (1979) Structure Tertiary structure of hGH 3D structure of pGH Characterization Spectroscopy - UV absorption - CD (Circular dichroism) - Fluorescence Electrophoresis - SDS-PAGE - IEF (Isoelectric focusing) gel electrophoresis Immunoassays Bioassays Chromatographic methods - Reversed – phase HPLC - Size – exclusion chromatography - Ion - exchange chromatography Degradation Deamidation : Conversion of the side chain in aspargine and glutamine residues to the carboxylate groups of aspartate and glutamate, respectively Degradation Oxidation : Methionine, tryptophan, histidine and tyrosine residues corresponding sulfoxide in methionine Reduction / Interchange of disulfide bonds Aggregation Proteolysis / Hydrolysis Stability Solution stability Plot of the first – order rate constants in days for deamidation of hGH in solution as a function of pH at 250C(•), 400C(■). Stability Stability in solid state Plot of the percent dimer, as measured by a size-exclusion HPLC assay, for freezedried samples of hGH, as a function of storage time at 400C • Biopia.snu.ac.kr • [email protected]