DUAL STATIONARY PHASE GRADIENT COLUMNS FOR NEW SELECTIVITIES IN LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY
20230366860 · 2023-11-16
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01D15/166
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01D15/38
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The present disclosure is directed to liquid chromatography columns and methods utilizing a stationary phase sorbent having two or more gradient factors. Each of the two or more gradient factors varies in a progressive manner along a length of the stationary phase sorbent in a direction from an inlet to an outlet of the column (i.e., along a length of the column). As a result of including these new continuous stationary phase gradients, new selectivities allowing for separation and analysis of complex samples including large biomolecules is achievable.
Claims
1. A chromatographic column comprising: a housing with an inlet and an outlet; and a stationary phase sorbent contained within the housing and extending from the inlet to the outlet, wherein the stationary phase sorbent is defined by two or more retention gradients that vary in a progressive manner along a length of the stationary phase sorbent in a direction from the inlet to the outlet of the housing.
2. The chromatographic column of claim 1, wherein at least one gradient of the two or more gradients increases along the length of the stationary phase sorbent in the direction from the inlet to the outlet.
3. The chromatographic column of claim 1, wherein at least one gradient is relative to a first analyte interaction with the stationary phase sorbent.
4. The chromatographic column of claim 1, wherein the two or more gradients are characterized by a first gradient factor and a second gradient factor, the second gradient factor having a different value than the first gradient factor.
5. The chromatographic column of claim 4, wherein the first gradient factor is relative to a first analyte interaction with the stationary phase sorbent and the second gradient factor is relative to a second analyte interaction with the stationary phase sorbent.
6. The chromatographic column of claim 5, wherein the first gradient factor increases (>1) along the length of the stationary phase sorbent and wherein the second gradient factor increases (>1) along the length of the stationary phase sorbent.
7. The chromatographic column of claim 5, wherein the first gradient factor increases (>1) along the length of the stationary phase sorbent and wherein the second gradient factor decreases (<1) along the length of the stationary phase sorbent.
8. The chromatographic column of claim 1, wherein the stationary phase is a mixed mode stationary phase comprising a first sorbent material and a second sorbent material.
9. The chromatographic column of claim 8, wherein concentration of the first sorbent material varies in a progressive manner along the length of the stationary phase.
10. The chromatographic column of claim 9, wherein concentration of the second sorbent material varies in a progressive manner along the length of the stationary phase.
11. The chromatographic column of claim 10, wherein a rate of concentration variation of the first sorbent material is different that a rate of concentration variation of the second sorbent material.
12. The chromatographic column of claim 10, wherein a rate of concentration variation of the first sorbent material is substantially the same as a rate of concentration variation of the second sorbent material.
13. The chromatographic column of claim 8, wherein the first sorbent material and the second sorbent material have chemically modified surfaces with distinctly different surface coverages.
14. The chromatographic column of claim 13, wherein the first sorbent material has surface coverage of 1 μmol/m.sup.2 C18 and 1 μmol/m.sup.2 diethyl amino propyl bonding and the second sorbent material has surface coverage of 1.5 to 2 μmol/m.sup.2 C18 and 0.5 to 0.1 μmol/m.sup.2 diethyl amino propyl bonding.
15. The chromatographic column of claim 3, wherein the stationary phase sorbent comprises a material with a C18 alkyl surface coverage, wherein the C18 alkyl surface coverage varies progressively along the length.
16. The chromatographic column of claim 3, wherein the stationary phase sorbent comprises a material with a charge modifier surface coverage, wherein the charge modifier surface coverage varies progressively along the length.
17. The chromatographic column of claim 3, wherein the stationary phase sorbent comprises an endcapped material, wherein the endcapping coverage of the stationary phase sorbent varies progressively along the length.
18. A method of improving a range of selectivity of a chromatographic separation, the method including: providing a chromatographic column, wherein the column includes a stationary phase sorbent material having two gradients that vary progressively along a length of the column; and applying a mobile phase gradient to separate a sample injected into the chromatographic column.
19. A method of modifying selectively for a chromatographic separation, the method comprising: controlling packing of a chromatographic column with a two phase stationary phase sorbent, the two phase stationary phase sorbent comprising a first sorbent material and a second sorbent material, the first sorbent material differing from the second sorbent material, wherein the first sorbent material is disposed within the chromatographic column to provide a first gradient factor of greater than 1 from an inlet to an outlet and the second sorbent material is disposed within the chromatographic column to provide a second gradient factor of greater than 1 from an inlet to the outlet.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the first sorbent material is altered using in situ silanization to provide variation of the at least one gradient factor along the length of the column.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0016] The technology will be more fully understood from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0040] In general, the present disclosure is directed to stationary phase sorbent material having two or more continuous gradients along a length of a liquid chromatography column. The present disclosure is also related to the use of a stationary phase sorbent material having two or more continuous gradients along a length of a liquid chromatography column to increase the range of available selectivities for a separation. The stationary phase gradients are continuous. That is, the stationary phase retention to an analyte (e.g., analyte A) increases or decreases progressively through the length of the column from the inlet to the outlet. The stationary phase in the present technology is unique in that it provides at least two continuous retention gradients along its length (i.e., retention gradient of analyte A and of analyte B changes progressively along the length of the column). For example, the first gradient can be characterized as having a first gradient factor, F.sub.SF1. A stationary phase gradient factor of >1 indicates an increasing retention to an analyte from the inlet to the outlet. A stationary phase gradient factor of <1 indicates a decreasing retention to an analyte from the inlet to the outlet.
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[0042] The stationary phase sorbent housed within the column 125 is defined by two or more (e.g., 2, 3, etc.) gradient that vary in a progressive manner (e.g., continuously) lengthwise in a direction extending between the inlet 123 to the outlet 127. That is, each gradient (e.g., a first gradient, a second gradient, a third gradient, etc.) varies in a continuous fashion along the length of the column 125. Each gradient can vary in a distinct manner. For example, a first gradient can increase from inlet 123 to outlet 127, while the second gradient can decrease from inlet 123 to outlet 127. In other embodiments, the first gradient and second gradient can both increase from inlet 123 to outlet 127, but at different rates. Without wishing to be bound by theory, it is believed that a modulation of two unique interaction mechanisms across a chromatographic column opens up previously unseen selectivities for separations. The columns and methods described herein can be extremely useful in separating and analyzing complex samples, especially those including biomolecules of various sizes.
[0043] To evaluate the effects of retention gradients on the stationary phase, a numerical analysis was conducted in which each of the gradients were associated with or characterized by a gradient factor. Using these gradient factors, an algorithm based on numerical integration to determine the migration speed (u) and the distance travelled by a solute (d) in both the temporal and spatial domains was applied. One can consider the mobile phase compositional gradient as a sequence of very small isocratic steps and similarly, the stationary phase gradient as very small uniform steps. Referring to
[0044] For a gradient stationary phase (a single gradient as an initial starting point), parameter S remained the same (as determined by the solute properties), while log k.sub.0 changed along the column (e.g., the local retention factor continuously increases in case of positive stationary phase gradient). We introduced stationary phase gradient factor (f.sub.SF) as:
Where log k.sub.0,out and log k.sub.0,in are the logarithmic retention factors at column outlet and inlet, respectively. Then f.sub.SF=1 corresponds to uniform column (no gradient), while >1 to positive gradient (i.e., an increasing gradient) and <1 to negative gradient (a decreasing gradient). In this analysis, the initial and final retention factors are defined with respect to a given column length (in analogy with the definition of selectivity as the ratio of retention factors).
[0045] Linear stationary phase and mobile phase gradients were assumed. For all model calculations we considered an L=10 cm long column, u.sub.0=20 cm/min mobile phase velocity. Gradient time was set mostly as t.sub.G=10 min, except when studying the impact of mobile phase gradient steepness (t.sub.G varied between 6 and 50 min). Plots of the distance travelled (d) by the solutes in time, plots of relative migration speed (urea, relative to mobile phase velocity) vs longitudinal migration distance (z) and contour plots of selectivity (a) vs f.sub.SF and/or mobile phase gradient steepness were constructed.
[0046] For LSS parameters, we used experimentally measured S values and log k.sub.0 values (as inlet retention to model a gradient column, so log k.sub.0=log k.sub.0,in, then f.sub.SF determines log k.sub.0,out) obtained on uniform column to simulate realistic cases. In this model, linearity refers to a continuous decrease/increase of the logarithmic retention factors. While other published references sometimes determine stationary phase gradient steepness as the change of retention factor and not as the logarithmic retention factors, as we have done, linear increments of stationary phase functionalities (e.g., concentration or surface coverage changes) will change retentivity in a logarithmic faction. As a result, in the model used in the present application it was more practical to use this linear form for the calculations. Thus, the f.sub.SF factor is a linear stationary phase gradient.
[0047] Various proteins (monoclonal antibody (mAb) intact and sub-units, ribonuclease, cytochrome c, BSA, myoglobin, enolase, insulin), oligonucleotides (dT 20, dT 40, dT 60, dT 80, dT 100) and some small molecules (ibuprofen and butylparaben) were considered for the model calculations. Results are provided below.
[0048] In the models, a mobile phase gradient was applied. The parameter phi (ϕ), which represents the volume fraction of the stronger solvent in the mobile phase, given as a range indicates that a gradient was applied.
Selectivity for Large Solutes (Proteins, Oligonucleotides) on a Gradient
[0049] Selectivity of a mixture containing ribonuclease (log k.sub.0=7.2, S=28.9), cytochrome c (log k.sub.0=10.9, S=38.3), BSA (log k.sub.0=40.2, S=114.4), myoglobin (log k.sub.0=15.2, S=40.4), enolase (log k.sub.0=26.1, S=64.1) and insulin (log k.sub.0=22.6, S=7.1) was studied on a set of gradient columns (f.sub.SF=1, 1.2 and 1.3) operated with various mobile phase compositional gradients (0=0.20-0.50, 0.27-0.50, 0.32-0.52). For this example, as a starting analysis, just a single stationary phase gradient (i.e., a stationary phase characterized by a single gradient factor).
[0050] A comparison of
[0051] When fixing the mobile phase gradient (i.e., the same mobile phase gradient), higher f.sub.SF factor results in higher selectivity. Compare distance between eluting analytes between
[0052] A similar outcome was achieved for a mixture of intact mAb and its subunits (log k.sub.0=6.0, S=18.8 for the light chain fragment and log k.sub.0=10.5, S=27.6 for the heavy chain fragment) when assuming columns of f.sub.SF=1-1.3. Nearly identical selectivity could be set with a fixed mobile phase gradient program on a gradient column as with a shifted and adjusted mobile phase gradient program on a uniform column. Compare
[0053] Finally, a model for an oligonucleotide mixture (dT-20: log k.sub.0=7.3, S=52.7, dT-40: log k.sub.0=16.8, S=111.6, dT-60: log k.sub.0=31.7, S=201.0, dT-80: log k.sub.0=60.5, S=373.3 and dT-100: log k.sub.0=143.6, S=868.5) eluted in ion-pairing reversed phase mode resulted in the same conclusion. A gradient column of f.sub.SF=1.6 along with 0=0.18-0.27 mobile phase gradient yielded the same selectivity as a uniform column, F.sub.SF=1 with 0=0.123-0.173. Compare
[0054] Thus, even though a gradient column can significantly change selectivity on a fixed mobile phase gradient, it would not seem to provide any new form of selectivity versus a traditional uniform column used with an adjusted mobile phase gradient.
Dual Stationary Phase Gradients in Compositional Gradient Elution Mode
[0055] In reality, multiple interactions occur between any stationary phase and even the simplest of analyte. Moreover, mixed mode columns are designed to intentionally elicit two or more retention mechanisms.
[0056] In a second stage numerical analysis, the consequences of applying two distinct stationary phase gradients within a single column was evaluated. Two interaction mechanisms were envisioned (im-A and im-B) along with the use of mobile phase gradient. While in this example two different mechanism were envisioned related to two different solutes, one could apply this analysis to the same solute that adsorbs to different ligands of the stationary phase in different extents.
[0057] In a first scenario, analysis of two solutes being retained on a uniform column (i.e., no stationary phase gradient) by two different mechanisms (solute A elutes according to a change in im-A while solute B elutes according to a change in im-B) was evaluated. When these solutes were set to have the same S parameter value (S=5) for both interactions but slightly different log k.sub.0 parameters (log k.sub.0=3 for im-A and log k.sub.0=2.6 for im-B), it was seen that that a fixed elution order would be obtained no matter the mobile phase gradient. In other words, an elution order change would not be possible through adjustments to the mobile phase gradient. See,
[0058] To further assess the effects of a stationary phase gradient on selectivity, a contour plot was constructed and presented in
[0059] A dual stationary phase gradient was also studied. The mobile phase compositional gradient program was fixed to ϕ=0.3-0.8 in 10 min and various dual stationary phase gradients were investigated.
[0060] The above numerical analysis illustrated the unique selectivities provided by stationary phase materials of the present technology (which incorporate two or more gradients along a column's length). There are a number of ways to generate a stationary phase material that is defined by at least two analyte retention gradients along the length of a column—that is from an inlet to an outlet. The stationary phase sorbent of the present technology can be in particle form or in monolithic form. In some embodiments, the stationary phase material is formed from two different starting materials—that is, two different sorbent materials that are disposed along the column length provide a gradient. For example, in an embodiment in which the stationary phase is composed of sorbent A and sorbent B, gradients can be created by increasing or decreasing the concentration of sorbent A and of sorbent B along the length of the column. The rate of change in concentration for sorbent A and sorbent B can be different, opposite, and/or the same. For example, the concentration of sorbent A could increase from the inlet to the outlet at 1% in concentration per 1 mm for a 100 mm column; whereas the concentration of sorbent B could decrease from the inlet to the outlet at 1% in concentration per 1 mm. Alternatively, both sorbent A and sorbent B concentrations could increase along the length of the column at the same rate or at different rates.
[0061] Sorbent A and sorbent B can be entirely different materials; or alternatively, sorbent A and sorbent B can share a similar core material with different shell or surface modification materials surrounding the cores. For example, in an embodiment sorbent A is a C18 particle with an alkyl coverage that varies from 0 to 2.5 μmol/m.sup.2 and sorbent B is a C18 with a diethyl amino propyl bondings that varies along the length of the column.
[0062] In addition to building the gradient into the column during loading or packing of the column, the gradient can be established through in situ techniques to alter the stationary phase along its length. In this way, the retention of an analyte with respect to the stationary phase can be altered in a progressive manner through the column.
[0063] In some embodiments, the first gradient of the stationary phase is built in (or positioned in) the column during loading or packing, while a second gradient of the stationary phase is created in situ by altering a material property of the packed/loaded stationary phase through infiltration of a chemical into either the inlet or the outlet. In some embodiments, more than one material property relating to retention of an analyte is altered through an in situ process. In certain embodiments, a first chemical affecting a first retention mechanism of the stationary phase is pushed through the inlet, while a second chemical affecting a second retention mechanism of the stationary phase is pushed through the outlet. In other embodiments, two different chemicals are pushed through the inlet, but at different times and/or at different rates. In situ processes may involve silanization of the packed/loaded stationary phase, hydrolysis of the packed/loaded stationary phase; and/or desilanization (i.e., destruction of silane bonding through an acid rip).
[0064] There are numerous different combinations of materials available for creating stationary phase sorbent materials in accordance with the present technology. The following examples are illustrative and are not intended to be limiting.
Altering Surface Modification to Create Gradients Along the Length of the Column
[0065] In one embodiment, the surface chemistry of the particles in the chromatography column varies in terms of coverage from the inlet to the outlet of the column. In one specific embodiment, this could entail a C18 alkyl coverage that varies from 0 to 3 μmol/m.sup.2 or conversely a 3 to 0 μmol/m.sup.2. Along the same column, the surface coverage of a charge modifying, including but not limited to a bonding of 4-ethyl pyridine, 2 ethyl pyridine, diethylamino ethyl, diethylaminopropyl or bis dipropylethylamine silane, may vary from 1 to 0 μmol/m.sup.2 or from 0 to 1 μmol/m.sup.2. In yet other embodiments, it might be endcapping with triethyl, trimethyl silyl or hexamethyldisilazane.
Utilizing In Situ Silanization to Create Gradients Along the Length of the Column
[0066] A column packed with 1.5 to 10 μm diameter porous, superficially porous or non-porous particles is plumbed onto a pump system. A solution of dissolved silane with a controlled concentration is then pumped through the inlet. Heating is applied to the column as needed to facilitate the bonding of the silane to the siloxyl surface. Flow rate and time is optimized for the surface coverage gradient/stationary phase gradient that is desired. Stop flow conditions might even be applied. The column is then flushed of the reagents and/or the reaction is quenched with a change to the solution conditions. Subsequently, in some embodiments in which two silanization reactions are desired, the column direction is inverted and a second silane solution is pumped into the column with the same reaction conditions mentioned above.
Using a Mixed Particle Slurry and Packing the Column with Concentration Gradients
[0067] Two or more unique batches of stationary phase can be mixed it varying proportions and incrementally packed into a column body. In one specific embodiment, a stationary phase having coverages of 1 μmol/m.sup.2 C18 and 1 μmol/m.sup.2 diethyl amino propyl bonding will be mixed in varying proportions with a stationary phase having coverages of 1.5 μmol/m.sup.2 C18 and 0.5 μmol/m.sup.2 diethyl amino propyl bondings. Moreover, the latter stationary phase could be mixed with a stationary phase having surface coverages of 2 μmol/m.sup.2 C18 and 0.1 μmol/m.sup.2 diethyl amino propyl bondings. Prepared slurries varying in the proportionate amounts of these stationary phase would then be incrementally or sequentially packed into the column body.