Q.4 Size exclusion chromatography is used to separate the proteins on the basis of – Size Temperature Net binding specificity Net charge

Q.4 Size exclusion chromatography is used to separate the proteins on the basis of –

  1. Size
  2. Temperature
  3. Net binding specificity
  4. Net charge

    Size exclusion chromatography separates proteins based on their size (hydrodynamic volume), using porous beads where larger proteins elute first. This makes “Size” the correct answer for this GATE Life Sciences question on protein purification techniques.

    Question Solution

    Correct Answer: Size. Size exclusion chromatography (SEC), also called gel filtration, purifies proteins by molecular size/shape without chemical interactions—larger molecules pass through column voids quickly, smaller ones enter pores and elute later.

    Option Analysis

    • Size: Correct. SEC relies on hydrodynamic radius; proteins > pore size elute in void volume (first), while smaller ones delay in pores. Ideal for desalting, aggregate removal, and fractionation (10 kDa–10 MDa range).

    • Temperature: Incorrect. Temperature affects protein stability but not SEC mechanism; it’s run isothermally (4–25°C) to preserve native structure.

    • Net binding specificity: Incorrect. This describes affinity chromatography (e.g., Ni-NTA for His-tags), where ligands bind targets specifically.

    • Net charge: Incorrect. Ion-exchange chromatography separates by charge (anion/cation exchangers); SEC is non-interactive.

    Introduction
    Size exclusion chromatography is used to separate the proteins on the basis of size, a key technique in molecular biology and biochemistry for GATE Life Sciences students in Jaipur. This non-denaturing method purifies via porous matrices, essential for analyzing aggregates and oligomers.

    SEC Mechanism

    Column beads (agarose/Sephadex) have defined pores. Sample flows; large proteins (e.g., aggregates) exclude from pores, elute at V0 (void volume, ~30% column). Small proteins permeate, elute at Vt (total volume). Resolution: Kav = (Ve – V0)/(Vt – V0), where Ve = elution volume.

    No binding—avoids activity loss. Run time: 0.5–2 column volumes.

    Comparison of Protein Separation Methods

    Method Basis Stationary Phase Key Use
    Size Exclusion Size/shape Porous beads Desalting, aggregates
    Ion Exchange Net charge Charged resins Charge variants
    Affinity Binding specificity Ligands (e.g., antibodies) Tagged protein isolation
    Hydrophobic Interaction Hydrophobicity Alkyl chains Surface hydrophobicity

    SEC often polishes multi-step protocols (after affinity/ion-exchange).

    Applications and Tips

    Purifies monoclonal antibodies, estimates MW via standards. Tips: Load <5% column volume; use isocratic buffer (150 mM NaCl, pH 7). For GATE: Distinguish size (SEC) from charge (IEC)—common PYQ trap.

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