BIOSEPARATION, cilt.9, sa.5, ss.277-281, 2000 (SCI-Expanded)
Partitioning of proteins in aqueous two-phase systems has been shown to provide a powerful method for separating and purifying mixtures of biomolecules by extraction. These systems are composed of aqueous solutions of either two water-soluble polymers, usually polyethylene glycol (PEG) and dextran (Dx), or a polymer and a salt, usually PEG and phosphate or sulfate. There are many factors which influence the partition coefficient K, the ratio of biomolecule concentration in the top phase to that in the bottom phase, in aqueous two-phase systems. The value of the partition coefficient relies on the physico-chemical properties of the target biomolecule and other molecules and their interactions with those of the chosen system. In this work, the partition behavior of pure bovine serum albumin in aqueous two-phase systems was investigated in order to see the effects of changes in phase properties on the partition coefficient K. The concentration of NaCl and pH were considered to be the factors having influence on K. Optimal conditions of these factors were obtained using the Box-Wilson experimental design. The optimum value of K was found as 0.0126 when NaCl concentration and pH were 0.14 M and 9.8, respectively, for a phase system composed of 8% (w/w) polyethylene glycol 3,350 - 9 (% w/w) dextran 37,500 - 0.05 M phosphate at 20 degreesC.