Submitted by yeeturking t3_xx28my in askscience
Alwayssunnyinarizona t1_iraz0ro wrote
Reply to comment by Scientific_Methods in is it possible to synthesize proteins chemically? by yeeturking
Or insect, or mammalian, depending on the application.
Mikedc1 t1_irb31kf wrote
Then downstream, depending on its properties it may be difficult to separate it from contaminants from the upstream processes mentioned above. Attachment to some resin based on charge or a binding site can be used in a chromatography setup. Solubility or inertness in some chemical can help. Finally regular filtration or some sort of hollow fibre tff setup.
NosemaCeranae t1_irbbvy9 wrote
> Attachment to some resin based on charge or a binding site can be used in a chromatography setup. Solubility or inertness in some chemical can help. Finally regular filtration or some sort of hollow fibre tff setup.
Yep. A very typical workflow would be preliminary semi-purification over an affinity column followed by isolation of your protein of interest over a size exclusion column. Just one, but very common, method.
[deleted] t1_irbtxem wrote
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Jordanno99 t1_irdxll2 wrote
You normally add a tag such as ctag, histag, monoFc or biotin to assist with purification.
[deleted] t1_irazkek wrote
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[deleted] t1_irbb8ns wrote
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