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Education Centre
About the purification of biomolecules
Purpose of purification
Developing purification protocols
How to combine purification steps
Purification development - summary
LC techniques
Affinity Chromatography
Desalting & Gel Filtration
Hydrophobic interaction chromatography
Animation
Basic principles
The Separation Mechanism
Elution modes
The HIC experiment
Effect of choice of ligand
Effect of eluent composition
Effect of temperature
Resolution in HIC
Optimisation of HIC experiments
HIC in Practice
Technique Profile
What is HIC?
Ion exchange chromatography
Reversed phase chromatography
Protein Purifier software
BioProcess™ Glossary

Effect of choice of ligand

The possibility to select between ligands of different hydrophobicities is important, since this offers a way to control the salt concentration necessary to adsorb a certain protein.

With low-hydrophobicity ligands the difference between adsorption and precipitation may sometimes be so small that certain proteins may partially precipitate under binding conditions (Fig 4.1).

Fig 4.1 Selecting the appropriate HIC ligand is often a balance
between strong enough binding and precipitation.


On the other hand, quite hydrophobic proteins may bind sufficiently strongly to high-hydrophobicity ligands that harsh, potentially denaturing conditions (e.g. organic solvents) are needed to desorbe them.

Listed below are the most commonly used ligands in order of binding strength:

Ether < Isopropyl < Butyl < Octyl < Phenyl

The difference between the first four ligands is quantitative rather than qualitative.
The phenyl ligand, however, offers another type of selectivity, mainly because of its possibility to form additional bonds.

Figure 4.2 demonstrates some effects of varying the ligand used.

Fig 4.2 Varying the type of HIC ligand has a profound effect on the separation.