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Comprehensive characterization of tense and relaxed quaternary state glutaraldehyde polymerized bovine hemoglobin as a function of cross‐link density

Authors :
Andre F. Palmer
Xiangming Gu
Donald A. Belcher
Ivan S. Pires
Chintan Savla
Crystal Bolden-Rush
Clayton T. Cuddington
Source :
Biotechnol Bioeng
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Previously, our lab developed high molecular weight (MW) tense (T) quaternary state glutaraldehyde polymerized bovine hemoglobins (PolybHbs) that exhibited reduced vasoactivity in several small animal models. In this work, we prepared PolybHb in the T- and relaxed (R) quaternary state with ultrahigh MW (> 500 kDa) with varying cross-link densities and investigated the effect of MW on key biophysical properties (i.e., O(2) affinity, cooperativity (Hill) coefficient, hydrodynamic diameter, polydispersity, polymer composition, viscosity, gaseous ligand-binding kinetics, auto-oxidation, and haptoglobin-binding kinetics). To further optimize current PolybHb synthesis and purification protocols, we performed a comprehensive meta-data analysis to evaluate correlations between procedural parameters (i.e. cross-linker:bovine Hb (bHb) molar ratio, gas/liquid exchange time, temperature during sodium dithionite addition, and number of diafiltration cycles) and the biophysical properties of both T-state and R-state PolybHbs. Our results showed that, the duration of the fast-step auto-oxidation phase of R-state PolybHb increased with decreasing glutaraldehyde:bHb molar ratio. Additionally, T-state PolybHbs exhibited significantly higher bimolecular rate constants for binding to haptoglobin and unimoleular O(2) offloading rate constants compared to R-state PolybHbs. The methemoglobin (metHb) level in the final product was insensitive to the molar ratio of glutaraldehyde to bHb for all PolybHbs. During tangential flow filtration processing of the final product, 14 diafiltration cycles was found to yield the lowest metHb level.

Details

ISSN :
10970290 and 00063592
Volume :
117
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biotechnology and Bioengineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....68572d3160cd60fd485e9f681738b8a2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/bit.27382