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Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2012

Pharmaceutical and biomedical applications of affinity chromatography: Recent trends and developments

David S. Hage; Jeanethe Anguizola; Cong Bi; Rong Li; Ryan Matsuda; Efthimia Papastavros; Erika L. Pfaunmiller; John Vargas; Xiwei Zheng

Affinity chromatography is a separation technique that has become increasingly important in work with biological samples and pharmaceutical agents. This method is based on the use of a biologically related agent as a stationary phase to selectively retain analytes or to study biological interactions. This review discusses the basic principles behind affinity chromatography and examines recent developments that have occurred in the use of this method for biomedical and pharmaceutical analysis. Techniques based on traditional affinity supports are discussed, but an emphasis is placed on methods in which affinity columns are used as part of HPLC systems or in combination with other analytical methods. General formats for affinity chromatography that are considered include step elution schemes, weak affinity chromatography, affinity extraction and affinity depletion. Specific separation techniques that are examined include lectin affinity chromatography, boronate affinity chromatography, immunoaffinity chromatography, and immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography. Approaches for the study of biological interactions by affinity chromatography are also presented, such as the measurement of equilibrium constants, rate constants, or competition and displacement effects. In addition, related developments in the use of immobilized enzyme reactors, molecularly imprinted polymers, dye ligands and aptamers are briefly considered.


Current Drug Metabolism | 2011

CHARACTERIZATION OF DRUG INTERACTIONS WITH SERUM PROTEINS BY USING HIGH-PERFORMANCE AFFINITY CHROMATOGRAPHY

David S. Hage; Jeanethe Anguizola; Omar S. Barnaby; Abby J. Jackson; Michelle J. Yoo; Efthimia Papastavros; Erika L. Pfaunmiller; Matt Sobansky; Zenghan Tong

The binding of drugs with serum proteins can affect the activity, distribution, rate of excretion, and toxicity of pharmaceutical agents in the body. One tool that can be used to quickly analyze and characterize these interactions is high-performance affinity chromatography (HPAC). This review shows how HPAC can be used to study drug-protein binding and describes the various applications of this approach when examining drug interactions with serum proteins. Methods for determining binding constants, characterizing binding sites, examining drug-drug interactions, and studying drug-protein dissociation rates will be discussed. Applications that illustrate the use of HPAC with serum binding agents such as human serum albumin, α(1)-acid glycoprotein, and lipoproteins will be presented. Recent developments will also be examined, such as new methods for immobilizing serum proteins in HPAC columns, the utilization of HPAC as a tool in personalized medicine, and HPAC methods for the high-throughput screening and characterization of drug-protein binding.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2011

Kinetic studies of drug–protein interactions by using peak profiling and high-performance affinity chromatography: Examination of multi-site interactions of drugs with human serum albumin columns

Zenghan Tong; John E. Schiel; Efthimia Papastavros; Corey M. Ohnmacht; Quentin R. Smith; David S. Hage

Carbamazepine and imipramine are drugs that have significant binding to human serum albumin (HSA), the most abundant serum protein in blood and a common transport protein for many drugs in the body. Information on the kinetics of these drug interactions with HSA would be valuable in understanding the pharmacokinetic behavior of these drugs and could provide data that might lead to the creation of improved assays for these analytes in biological samples. In this report, an approach based on peak profiling was used with high-performance affinity chromatography to measure the dissociation rate constants for carbamazepine and imipramine with HSA. This approach compared the elution profiles for each drug and a non-retained species on an HSA column and control column over a board range of flow rates. Various approaches for the corrections of non-specific binding between these drugs and the support were considered and compared in this process. Dissociation rate constants of 1.7 (±0.2) s(-1) and 0.67 (±0.04) s(-1) at pH 7.4 and 37°C were estimated by this approach for HSA in its interactions with carbamazepine and imipramine, respectively. These results gave good agreement with rate constants that have determined by other methods or for similar solute interactions with HSA. The approach described in this report for kinetic studies is not limited to these particular drugs or HSA but can also be extended to other drugs and proteins.


Analytical Methods | 2011

Chromatographic analysis of drug interactions in the serum proteome

David S. Hage; Jeanethe Anguizola; Abby J. Jackson; Ryan Matsuda; Efthimia Papastavros; Erika L. Pfaunmiller; Zenghan Tong; John Vargas-Badilla; Michelle J. Yoo; Xiwei Zheng

The binding of drugs with serum proteins and binding agents such as human serum albumin, α1-acid glycoprotein, and lipoproteins is an important process in determining the activity and fate of many pharmaceuticals in the body. A variety of techniques have been used to study drug interactions with serum proteins, but there is still a need for faster or better methods for such work. High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) is one tool that has been utilized in many formats for these types of measurements. Advantages of using HPLC for this application include its speed and precision, its ability to be automated, its good limits of detection, and its compatibility with a wide range of assay formats and detectors. This review will discuss various approaches in which HPLC can be employed for the study of drug-protein interactions. These techniques include the use of soluble proteins in zonal elution and frontal analysis methods or vacancy techniques such as the Hummel-Dreyer method. Zonal elution and frontal analysis methods that make use of immobilized proteins and high-performance affinity chromatography will also be presented. A variety of applications will be examined, ranging from the determination of free drug fractions to the measurement of the strength or rate of a drug-protein interaction. Newer developments that will be discussed include recent work in the creation of novel mathematical approaches for HPLC studies of drug-protein binding, the use of HPLC methods for the high-throughput screening of drug-protein binding, and the creation and use of affinity monoliths or affinity microcolumns for examining drug-protein systems.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2014

Development of microcolumn-based one-site immunometric assays for protein biomarkers.

Erika L. Pfaunmiller; Jeanethe Anguizola; Mitchell L. Milanuk; Efthimia Papastavros; NaTasha Carter; Ryan Matsuda; Xiwei Zheng; David S. Hage

One-site immunometric assays that utilize affinity microcolumns were developed and evaluated for the analysis of protein biomarkers. This approach used labeled antibodies that were monitored through on-line fluorescence or near-infrared (NIR) fluorescence detection. Human serum albumin (HSA) was utilized as a model target protein for this approach. In these assays, a fixed amount of labeled anti-HSA antibodies was mixed with samples or standards containing HSA, followed by the injection of this mixture onto an HSA microcolumn to remove excess antibodies and detect the non-retained labeled antibodies that were bound to HSA from the sample. The affinity microcolumns were 2.1mm i.d. ×5mm and contained 8-9nmol of immobilized HSA. These microcolumns were used from 0.10 to 1.0mL/min and gave results within 35s to 2.8min of sample injection. Limits of detection down to 0.10-0.28ng/mL (1.5-4.2pM) or 25-30pg/mL (0.38-0.45pM) were achieved when using fluorescein or a NIR fluorescent dye as the label, with an assay precision of ±0.1-4.2%. Several parameters were examined during the optimization of these assays, and general guidelines and procedures were developed for the extension of this approach for use with other types of affinity microcolumns and protein biomarkers.


Liquid Chromatography#R##N#Applications | 2013

Chapter 1 – Affinity Chromatography

David S. Hage; Jeanethe Anguizola; Rong Li; Ryan Matsuda; Efthimia Papastavros; Erika L. Pfaunmiller; Matthew R. Sobansky; Xiwei Zheng

Affinity chromatography is a type of liquid chromatography that uses a biologically related agent as a stationary phase to purify or analyze specific sample components. This chapter examines the basic components and principles of affinity chromatography and various applications of this method. The general types of ligands, immobilization schemes, support materials, and elution conditions that can be employed in affinity chromatography are first examined. Various methods in this field are then considered, including bioaffinity chromatography, immunoaffinity chromatography, dye-ligand and biomimetic affinity chromatography, immobilized metal-ion affinity chromatography, and analytical affinity chromatography. The types of ligands utilized in each of these methods are described, along with common applications of these techniques. Several related developments are also discussed, such as the use of affinity chromatography with mass spectrometry, miniaturized systems, molecularly imprinted polymers, and aptamers.


Journal of Separation Science | 2018

Affinity extraction of emerging contaminants from water based on bovine serum albumin as a binding agent

Efthimia Papastavros; Rachael A. Remmers; Daniel D. Snow; David A. Cassada; David S. Hage

Affinity sorbents using bovine serum albumin as a binding agent were developed and tested for the extraction of environmental contaminants from water. Computer simulations based on a countercurrent distribution model were also used to study the behavior of these sorbents. Several model drugs, pesticides, and hormones of interest as emerging contaminants were considered in this work, with carbamazepine being used as a representative analyte when coupling the albumin column on-line with liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry. The albumin column was found to be capable of extracting carbamazepine from aqueous solutions that contained trace levels of this analyte. Further studies of the bovine serum albumin sorbent indicated that it had higher retention under aqueous conditions than a traditional C18 support for most of the tested emerging contaminants. Potential advantages of using these protein-based sorbents included the low cost of bovine serum albumin and its ability to bind to a relatively wide range of drugs and related compounds. It was also shown how simulations could be used to describe the elution behavior of the model compounds on the bovine serum albumin sorbents as an aid in optimizing the retention and selectivity of these supports for use with liquid chromatography or methods such as liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry.


Liquid Chromatography (Second Edition)#R##N#Fundamentals and Instrumentation | 2017

Chapter 12 – Affinity chromatography

David S. Hage; Jeanethe Anguizola; Rong Li; Ryan Matsuda; Efthimia Papastavros; Erika L. Pfaunmiller; Matthew R. Sobansky; Xiwei Zheng

Affinity chromatography is a type of liquid chromatography that uses a biologically related agent as a stationary phase to purify or analyze specific sample components. This chapter examines the basic components and principles of affinity chromatography and various applications of this method. The general types of ligands, immobilization schemes, support materials, and elution conditions that can be employed in affinity chromatography are first examined. Various methods in this field are then considered, including bioaffinity chromatography, immunoaffinity chromatography, dye-ligand and biomimetic affinity chromatography, immobilized metal-ion affinity chromatography, and analytical affinity chromatography. The types of ligands used in each of these methods are described, along with common applications of these techniques. Several related developments are also discussed, such as the use of affinity chromatography with mass spectrometry, miniaturized systems, molecularly imprinted polymers, and aptamers.


Langmuir | 2004

Oxygen, carbon, and sulfur segregation in annealed and unannealed zerovalent iron substrates

Efthimia Papastavros; Patrick J. Shea; M. A. Langell


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2007

ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS BY ON-LINE IMMUNOEXTRACTION AND REVERSED-PHASE LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY: OPTIMIZATION OF THE IMMUNOEXTRACTION/RPLC INTERFACE

Mary Anne Nelson; Efthimia Papastavros; Maud Dodlinger; David S. Hage

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David S. Hage

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Jeanethe Anguizola

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Erika L. Pfaunmiller

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Ryan Matsuda

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Xiwei Zheng

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Rong Li

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Zenghan Tong

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Abby J. Jackson

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Cong Bi

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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John Vargas-Badilla

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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