2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(240d) Ultrafiltration Characteristics of Plasmid DNA
Authors
Experiments were conducted with a 3000 base pair pBluescript plasmid using Ultracel composite regenerated cellulose membranes. Plasmid concentrations were evaluated using PicoGreen DNA fluorescent reagent in combination with a microplate reader allowing accurate detection of concentrations as low as 250 ng/L. Stirred-cell ultrafiltration experiments were conducted over a range of filtrate flux rates and solution ionic strength. The plasmid transmission was a very strong function of the filtrate flux with the observed sieving coefficient increasing by over 100 fold, from <0.01 to 0.85, as the flux increased from 7 to 40 µm/s at a NaCl concentration of 150 mM. This increase in transmission was greater than that predicted using available concentration polarization models, suggesting that there may have been a flow-induced conformational change in the plasmid DNA. The plasmid sieving coefficient was also a strong function of the salt concentration; the sieving coefficient increased by more than 80 fold as the NaCl concentration increased from 1 to 150 mM at a constant flux of 40 µm/s. These results clearly demonstrate the importance of both solution conditions and operating parameters on the ultrafiltration behavior of plasmid DNA.