AI Article Synopsis

  • Copper-chelated chitosan microgels are used as a new method for separating peptides through immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC), showing strong interactions with various amino acids.
  • The microgels specifically capture anionic amino acids, leading to a relative increase in cationic amino acids in the solution.
  • Testing on milk hydrolysates revealed that these beads effectively removed larger peptides, enriching the solution in smaller cationic peptides known for beneficial bioactivities like anti-microbial effects.

Article Abstract

Copper-chelated chitosan microgels were investigated as an immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) phase for peptide separation. The copper-crosslinked chitosan beads were shown to strongly interact with a range of amino acids, in a wide range of pH and saline conditions. The beads exhibited an affinity that seemed to depend on the isoelectric point of the amino acid, with the extent of uptake increasing with decreasing isoelectric point. This selective interaction with anionic amino acids resulted in a significant relative enrichment of the supernatant solution in cationic amino acids. The beads were then studied as a novel fractionation system for complex milk hydrolysates. The copper chitosan beads selectively removed larger peptides from the hydrolysate aqueous solution, yielding a solution relatively enriched in medium and smaller peptides, which was characterized both quantitatively and qualitatively by size exclusion chromatography (SEC). Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LCMS) work provided comprehensive data on a peptide sequence level and showed that a depletion of the anionic peptides by the beads resulted in a relative enrichment of the cationic peptides in the supernatant solution. It could be concluded that after fractionation a dramatic relative enrichment in respect to small- and medium-sized cationic peptides in the solution, characteristics that have been linked to bioactivities, such as anti-microbial and cell-penetrating properties. The results demonstrate the use of the chitosan copper gel bead system in lab scale fractionation of complex hydrolysate mixtures, with the potential to enhance milk hydrolysate bioactivity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11121711PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/gels10050289DOI Listing

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