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Bioseperation 12

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Bioseparation Techniques 1.

Overview of bioseparations engineering


Dr. Tarek Elbashiti
Assoc. Prof. of Biotechnology

Course Overview
Offer basic and advanced skills in the biological separation which frequently used Start by simple introduction to bioseparation fields, followed by a detailed study of bioseparation techniques such as precipitation, centrifugation, cell disruption and materials extraction, followed by basic chromatographic, membrane based bioseparations, HPLC and other chromatography techniques
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One of the major segments within biotechnology is bioprocessing which deals with the manufacture of biochemicals, biopharmaceuticals, foods, nutraceuticals, and agrochemicals.

New biologically derived products have been developed, approved and licensed in the last decade. This includes monoclonal antibodies used for the treatment of cancer and multiple sclerosis, plasmids for gene therapy, cytokines and interleukins. Many of these products need to be extensively purified before they can be used for their respective applications.
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Bioseparations engineering refers to the systematic study of the scientific and engineering principles utilized for the large-scale purification of biological products. It is specifically referred to the separation and purification segment of a bioprocess which followed some form of biological reaction e.g. purification of an antibiotic following microbial fermentation.
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The manufacture of several types of biological products does not involve in-vitro biological reactions. These products are synthesized in vivo in their respective natural sources and these are simply recovered using appropriate techniques e.g. manufacture of plasma proteins from blood, extraction of alkaloids from plants, extraction of enzymes from animal tissue.
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Bioprocessing can be classified into two categories: 1. Reactive bioprocessing 2. Extractive bioprocessing In reactive bioprocessing, the bioseparation process follows some form of biological reaction Extractive bioprocessing almost completely involves bioseparation.

Examples of reactive biosep include, but are not limited to, biofuel recovery from fermentation broth, primary recovery of proteins from cell cultures, two aqueous phase extraction and micellar systems for selective partitioning of proteins, and reversible chemical complexation for the recovery of complex organics. Examples of extractive biosep(ethanol production, acetone/butanol production, etc
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What is separated in bioseparation?

Biologically derived products can be categorized in different ways, one way being based on their chemical nature or their intended applications .

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Biological products can also be classified based on their intended applications (Table 1.2):

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Economic importance of bioseparation


The purification of biological products from their respective starting material e.g. cell culture media is technically difficult and expensive. This could frequently be the critical limiting factor in the commercialization of a biological product. In many cases bioseparation cost can be a considerable component of the total cost of bioprocessing.
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Nature of bioseparation
Bioseparation is largely based on chemical separation processes. Excess of well established separation techniques is used in the chemical industry. A number of these techniques were found to be suitable for carrying out biological separations. Some biologically derived substance such as antibiotics and other low molecular weight compounds such as vitamins and amino acids are purified using direct separation techniques such as liquid-liquid extraction, packed bed adsorption, evaporation and drying with no modifications being necessary.
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Modified separation techniques are required for purifying more complex molecules such as proteins, lipids, carbohydrates and nucleic acids. Often totally new types of separation techniques have to be developed. Some of the characteristics of bioseparation which distinguish it from chemical separation are:

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1. Biological products are present in very low concentrations in the starting material from which they are purified. For example, monoclonal antibodies are typically present in concentrations around 0.1 mg/ml in the mammalian cell culture supernatants. Hence large volumes of dilute product streams have to be processed for obtaining even modest amounts of pure products.
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2. Several other substances which are usually impurities and in some instances byproducts are present in the starting material along with target biological products. Frequently these impurities or by-products have chemical and physical properties similar to those of the target product. This makes separation extremely challenging. Therefore, bioseparation has to be very selective in nature. 18

3. There are strict quality requirements for products used for prophylactic, diagnostic and therapeutic purposes both in terms of active product content as well as in terms of the absence of specific impurities. Injectable therapeutic products should be free from endotoxins and pyrogens.

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4. Biological products are susceptible to denaturation and other forms of degradation. Therefore bioseparation techniques have to be gentle in terms of avoiding extremes of physicochemical conditions such as pH and ionic strengths, hydrodynamic conditions such as high cut off rates, and exposure to gas-liquid interfaces. Organic solvents which are widely used in chemical separations have relatively limited usage in bioseparations on account of their tendency to promote degradation of many biological products.
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5. Many biological products are thermolabile and hence many bioseparation techniques are usually carried out at subambient temperatures. 6. Bioseparation is frequently based on multi-technique separation.

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Basis of separation in bioseparation processes


Biological products are separated based on one or more of the following factors: 1. Size: e.g. filtration, membrane separation, centrifugation
2. Density: e.g. centrifugation, sedimentation, floatation 3. Diffusivity: e.g. membrane separation
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4. Shape: e.g. centrifugation, filtration, sedimentation 5. Polarity: e.g. extraction, chromatography, adsorption 6. Solubility: e.g. extraction, precipitation, crystallization 7. Electrostatic charge: e.g. adsorption, membrane separation, electrophoresis 8. Volatility: e.g. distillation, membrane distillation, pervaporation
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Physical forms separated in bioseparation


1- Particle-liquid separation The separation of cells from cell culture medium, the separation of blood cells from plasma in the manufacture of plasma proteins, and the removal of bacteria and viruses from protein solutions. Particle-liquid separation can be achieved by forcing the suspension through a porous medium which retains the particles while allowing the liquid to go through. 24

This principle is utilized in filtration and membrane separation. Particle-liquid separation can also be achieved by subjecting the suspension to natural or artificial induced gravitational fields. This principle is utilized in separation processes such as sedimentation and centrifugation. If the particles are lighter than the liquid in which they are suspended, these would tend to float and hence concentrate near the top of the container in which the suspension is held. This principle is utilized in floatation.
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2- Particle-particle separation in liquid medium

The fractionation of sub-cellular organelle, the separation of plasmid DNA from chromosomal DNA, and the separation of mature cells from young cells. This type of separation can be achieved by zonal centrifugation which involves the introduction of the mixture at a location within a liquid medium which is then subjected to an artificially induced gravitational field.
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As a result of this the heavier particles would migrate faster than the lighter particles, resulting in their separation into distinct bands from which these particles can be subsequently recovered using appropriate means. Particle-particle separation can in theory be carried out by using a porous medium which retains the bigger particles but allows the smaller particles to go through.
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3-Particle-solute separation in liquid medium

The separation of dissolved antibiotics from cells and cell debris present in fermentation broth. The methods used for particle-solute separation are fundamentally similar to those used for solid-liquid separation on account of the fact that the solute remains dissolved in the liquid medium.
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4-Solute-solvent separation
The purpose of this being either the total or partial removal of a solvent from a solute product (e.g. protein concentration enrichment), OR The removal of dissolved impurities from a liquid product, OR The replacement of a solvent from a solution by another (i.e. solvent exchange). A range of options are available for solutesolvent separation the easiest of these being evaporation and distillation. 29

These techniques involve the application of heat and cannot therefore be used for separation of biological materials which tend to be thermolabile. Membranes which can retain dissolved material while allowing solvents through are widely used for this type of separation: a reverse osmosis membrane will retain small molecules and ions, a nanofiltration membrane will retain larger molecules such as vitamins, hormones and antibiotics, while an ultrafiltration membrane will retain macromolecules such as proteins and nucleic acids.
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Another way of removing a solvent from a solute is by reversibly binding the solute on to a solid surface, this being referred to as adsorption. Once solute binding has taken place, this separation is transformed to a particleliquid separation, i.e. the solvent is separated from the solid-bound solute. The bound solute is subsequently recovered from the solid material, this being referred to as desorption.
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An indirect method for solute-solvent separation is by inducing precipitation of the solute, thereby once again transforming the separation to a particle-liquid separation.

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5- Solute-solute separation in liquid medium


The most challenging form of separation. An example of this is the separation of serum albumin from other serum proteins. Solute-solute separation can be achieved by selective adsorption, i.e. by selectively and reversibly binding the target solute on to a solid material. Solute-solute separation can also be carried out by liquid-liquid extraction, i.e. by contacting the solution with an immiscible liquid in which the target solute has high solubility.

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Nanofiltration, ultrafiltration and dialysis membranes can be used for such separations. An indirect way of carrying out solute-solute separation is by precipitation, which involves the selective precipitation of the target solute.
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6- Liquid-liquid separation
Liquid-liquid separation is required in the manufacture of solvents such as acetone and ethanol which typically have to be separated from an aqueous medium. If the solvent is immiscible with water, phase separation followed by decantation may be sufficient. However, if the solvent is miscible with water (as in the case of ethanol), other separation methods have to be utilized.
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With temperature stable and volatile solvents such as ethanol, distillation has been traditionally used. However with the advent of membrane technology, separation processes such as membrane distillation and pervaporation have come into widespread use. Typically, the upstream side of the membrane is at ambient pressure and the downstream side is under vacuum to allow the evaporation of the selective component after infiltration through the membrane
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Bioseparation techniques
Table 1.4 categorizes bioseparation techniques into two broad groups. As previously mentioned, a bioseparation process must combine high selectivity (or resolution) with high throughput (or productivity). Hence bioseparation processes tend to be based on multiple techniques arranged such that both highresolution and high-throughput can be obtained in an overall sense.

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The RIPP scheme


While developing a bioseparation process the following should be taken into consideration: 1. The nature of starting material: e.g. a cell suspension, a crude protein solution 2. The initial location of the target product: e.g. intracellular, extracellular, embedded in solid material such as inclusion bodies 3. The volume or flow-rate of the starting material

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4. The relative abundance of the product in the starting material, i.e. its concentration relative to impurities 5. The susceptibility to degradation e.g. its pH stability, sensitivity to high shear rates or exposure to organic solvents 6. The desired physical form of the final product, e.g. lyophilized powder, sterile solution, suspension 7. The quality requirements, e.g. percentage purity, absence of endotoxins or aggregates 8. Process costing and economics
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A RIPP (Recovery, Isolation, Purification and Polishing) scheme is commonly used in bioseparation. This strategy involves use of low resolution techniques (e.g. precipitation, filtration, centrifugation, and crystallization) first for recovery and isolation followed by high resolution techniques (e.g. affinity separations, chromatography, and electrophoresis) for purification and polishing.
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The high-throughput, low-resolution techniques are first used to significantly reduce the volume and overall concentration of the material being processed. The partially purified products are then further processed by highresolution low-throughput techniques to obtain pure and polished finished products.
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Example of bioseparation
A scheme for the bioseparation of reagent grade monoclonal antibody from cell culture supernatant is shown in Fig. 1.2. Murine or mouse monoclonal antibodies are produced by culturing hybridoma cells in different types of bioreactors. In recent years it has been possible to synthesize humanized and chimaric monoclonal antibodies by culturing recombinant Chinese Hamster Ovarian (CHO) cells.
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In the bioseparation scheme shown in Fig. 1.2, the key purification step involves affinity chromatography. Prior to affinity chromatography the cell culture supernatant needs to be cleaned up by membrane filtration or centrifugation so that cells, cell debris and other particulate matter do not clog-up the affinity column. The nearly purified monoclonal antibody obtained by affinity chromatography is further purified by ion-exchange chromatography and polished by gel-filtration to obtain greater than 98% pure product in the solution form.
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Current trends in the bioseparation


The main disadvantages of using the RIPP scheme are: 1. High capital cost 2. High operations cost 3. Lower recovery of product

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With the advent of membrane separation processes and other new types of separations, the potential exists for avoiding the conventional RIPP scheme. Membrane processes give high throughput and can be fine-tuned or optimized to give very high selectivity. Some of these new and emerging techniques are: 1. Membrane and monolith chromatography 2. Expanded-bed chromatography 3. High-resolution ultrafiltration 4. Hybrid bioseparations

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