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| Chromatofocusing (CF) is a variant of ion e x change ch r o m a t o g ra p hy. CF invo l ves the elution of ion exchangers solely by the mechanism of pH. In anion CF, proteins are bound to an anion exchanger at high pH. As the pH on the column descends, protein positive ch a r g e becomes stronger (more column-repellent) and protein negative charge becomes weaker (less column-attra c t ive). The opposite situation p r e vails in cation CF. Either way, pH conditions in the column eventually reach a point where a given protein's net interaction with the column becomes zero, and it elutes. pH gradient elution partly defines CF, but the full definition is more restrictive. First, CF i nvo l ves generation of a linear pH gra d i e n t *within* the column -- not an externally applied gradient. With anion CF, this is done by titrating the column initially to a pH high enough to bind the protein of interest, then applying a low pH titrating/elution buffer that contains buffer species collectively embodying a range of pKas. The range of pKas is selected to provide level buffer capacity across the entire pH amplitude of the intended gradient. When the buffer capacity of the eluting buffer is properly matched to the charge density of the column, a physical linear pH gradient is created inside the column. Proteins partition at the pH ostensibly representing their isoelectric point (pI). As the p hysical gradient migrates down the column, d r iven by the continuing flow of titra t i n g / e l ution buffer, the proteins move with it, eluting when the pH of the buffer exiting the column is equal to their pI. A second defining ch a racteristic is that CF be conducted at low conductiv i t y. This prevents salt-elution effects from skewing the s e l e c t iv i t y. A third defining ch a racteristic is that the column should maintain level ion e x change capacity over the pH range of the s e p a ration. This is an essential determinant of g radient linearity. When all these conditions are met, some proteins do indeed elute near their pI; sometimes ve r y near their pI; but many miss it by a wide mark. Discrepancies occur for seve ra l reasons. One is that proteins are 3-dimensional structures, while most ion exch a n g e r s present a generally 2-dimensional binding surface. This means that unless all of a protein's charges are localized on one small part of its surface, only a fraction of those ch a r g e s will be in contact with the exch a n g e r. If the distribution of charges is truly random, then the protein's desorption behavior may mimic its true pI. How e ve r, protein charges tend to be distributed uneve n l y, and only the most complementary surface interacts with the column. This phenomenon is called preferential orientation and its practical significance is that a protein's "contact pI" may be significantly different from its true pI. Elution behavior will deviate accordingly. |