1. Advantageous use of SFC for separation of crude therapeutic peptides and peptide libraries.
- Author
-
Ventura M
- Subjects
- Ammonia chemistry, Complex Mixtures chemical synthesis, Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions, Methanol chemistry, Peptides chemical synthesis, Peptides therapeutic use, Solvents chemistry, Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid methods, Complex Mixtures isolation & purification, Drug Discovery methods, Peptide Library, Peptides isolation & purification
- Abstract
A simple SFC/MS (Supercritical Fluid Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry) method set was developed to effectively screen separations of various crude synthetic peptide products of pharmaceutical interest. Additives to the modifier methanol which were successful for these separations were found to include TFA (trifluoroacetic acid) and ammonia mixed with TFA, each at 0.1 % (v/v) composition in methanol. A final screening column set consisted of 2-ethylpyride (2-EP), 4-ethylpyridine (4-EP) and cross-linked diol (Luna™ HILIC) stationary phases. Small, linear and macrocyclic peptides with fewer than ten residues could all be eluted with good performance under at least one of the method conditions comprising the final screening protocol. For larger peptides either the 4-EP and HILIC columns with the above additives provided a good initial screening method set without 2-EP. The gradient was slightly longer and shifted to higher polarity relative to the gradients for smaller peptides. This method was often successful to elute large, hydrophilic peptides up to a 41-mer with acceptable peak profiles although the largest peptides with most ionizable residues were most challenging. For these peptides generally HILIC column performance was better with TFA + ammonia in the modifier than with TFA, while 4-EP performance was usually improved with TFA relative to TFA + ammonia., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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