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Hydrophobic Interaction Chromatography (HIC)


High performance hydrophobic interaction chromatography is a very powerful technique for the isolation of proteins in an analytical and preparative scale. The method is based on the interaction between moderately hydrophobic ligands, fixed on the chromatographic support, and the hydrophobic areas located on the surface of proteins. The hydrophobic feature of a given protein is mainly caused by the amino acids isoleucine, valine, leucine, and phenylalanine.

The hydrophobic ligands are presumed to interact with hydrophobic side chains of the protein where an electron donor-acceptor complex is formed. The hydrophobic character of a protein is promoted by high salt concentrations. The salt, however, not only affects the molar concentration of water, but changes the conformational structure of the proteins, the hydrophobic interaction forces and the hydration shell of the protein (salting out effect).

Elution:

The proteins are desorbed by decreasing concentrations of salt after the hydrophobic properties of the proteins are reduced during the gradient. The desorption from HIC columns occur in the order of increasing surface hydrophobicity.

Getting Started Now (Practical hints)

Adequate Buffers

Typically, HIC is carried out with a linear elution from a relatively high ammonium sulphate concentration to a low ammonium sulphate concentration. Due to different hydrophobic properties of proteins, the salt concentration for each separation on hydrophobic media should be tested experimentally. In general, increasing ionic strength increases hydrophobic interactions. Both anions and cations can be sorted in a list starting with those that highly favor the interaction to those that will reduce hydrophobic forces.
For anions, the series is PO43- > SO42- > CH3COO- > Cl- > Br- > NO3- > SCN-.
The cations series is NH42+ > Rb+ > K+ > Na+ > Li+ > Mg+ > Ca2+ > Ba2+.
Strong chaotropic salts disrupt the structure of water resulting in decreased hydrophobic interactions. Many different buffer systems can be used for hydrophobic interaction chromatography. Because ammonium sulphate is instable under basic conditions the pH should be below 8 when working with ammonium sulphate. Sodium sulphate is suitable as a salting-out agent, but solubility problems exclude its use at high concentrations. Buffers should be prepared with an appropriate salt concentration. For example, phosphate buffer (20 - 50mM) can be used containing 1.5 - 1.8M ammonium sulphate. Also other salts can be recommended such as various phosphate salts, sodium citrate, or sodium acetate.


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