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Effect of rapidity of phase separation on the efficiency of cell fractionation by partitioning in aqueous two-phase systems
Authors:H Walter  E J Krob
Institution:Laboratory of Chemical Biology, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Long Beach, CA 90822.
Abstract:Partitioning in two-polymer aqueous phase systems is an established method for the separation, purification and characterization of biomaterials. Because of the relatively slow settling rates of these phases, a consequence of the slight difference in density between them, effort has been directed to speeding up phase separation by various means (e.g., the development of a thin-layer countercurrent distribution apparatus). This has resulted in the more rapid processing of materials. Unlike soluble materials, biological particulates (e.g., cells) generally partition between one of the bulk phases and the interface. The mechanism of cell partitioning involves cell-specific adsorption to droplets of one phase suspended in the other, subsequent to phase mixing, and the delivery of adsorbed cells to the bulk interface as the droplets settle. In this communication we show, using erythrocytes as a model, that speeding up phase separation is counterproductive when partitioning cells and results in reduced efficiency of their separation or subfractionation. The most likely reason for this result is that increasing the speed of phase settling removes the droplets of one phase suspended in the other more rapidly than cells can attach to them, thereby interfering with the mechanism whereby cells partition.
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