Diafiltration
Diafiltration
Diafiltration
or Buffer Exchange
Larry Schwartz
iafiltration is an
ultrafiltration
membrane technique
for completely
removing, replacing, or
lowering the concentration of salts
or solvents from solutions
containing proteins, peptides,
nucleic acids, and other
biomolecules. The process
selectively uses permeable (porous)
membrane filters to separate the
components of solutions and
suspensions based on their
molecular size. Smaller molecules
such as salts, solvents, and water
pass freely through the
ultrafiltration membrane, which
retains the larger molecules.
CONCENTRATION
The solution retained by a
membrane is known as concentrate
or retentate. The solution that
passes through a membrane is
known as the filtrate or permeate. A
membrane for concentration is
selected based on its rejection
KEYWORDS: ULTRAFILTRATION,
DIAFILTRATION, BUFFER EXCHANGE,
DESALTING, PROTEIN CONCENTRATION
LEVEL: INTERMEDIATE
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Another
ADVANTAGE
of using
diafiltration is
concentration of
samples on one
system, minimizing
the risk of sample
loss or
contamination.
BioProcess International
MAY 2003
Permeability 100%
Rejection Coefficient 0
Permeability 75%
Rejection Coefficient 0.25
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
63%
86%
95%
98.2%
99.3%
99.7%
99.9%
53%
77%
89%
95%
97.6%
98.9%
99.4%
99.7%
99.9%
Note: 0% rejection salts, solvents, buffers, etc.; 25% rejection molecules lower in molecular weight than
the molecular weight cutoff of the membrane, but bigger than salts
Table 2: Salt reduction from sample using volume reduction or constant volume diafiltration
Diafiltration
Volumes
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
2 Volume Reduction
Constant Volume
50%
75%
88%
94%
96.9%
98.4%
99.2%
99.6%
99.9%
99.9%
63%
86%
95%
98.2%
99.3%
99.7%
99.9%
41%
65%
79%
88%
93%
95.6%
97.4%
98.4%
99.4%
99.4%
53%
77%
89%
95%
97.6%
98.7%
99.4%
99.7%
99.9%
Note: 0% rejection salts, solvents, buffers, etc.; 25% rejection molecules lower in molecular weight than
the molecular weight cutoff of the membrane, but bigger than salts
BioProcess International
MAY 2003
Equation 1
DIAFILTRATION DEFINITIONS
Diafiltration: Diafiltration is a
technique of continuous
diafiltration (also referred to as
constant volume diafiltration)
involves washing out the original
buffer salts (or other
lowmolecular-weight species) in
the retentate (sample) by adding
water or a new buffer to the
retentate at the same rate as
filtrate is being generated.
Discontinuous Diafiltration by
Sequential Dilution involves first
Discontinuous Diafiltration by
Volume Reduction involves first
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Although it might
take less volume to
diafilter a
concentrated
sample, it could
take more time
compared to a less
concentrated
sample.
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MAY 2003
Equation 3
performing (continuous)
diafiltration can be determined as in
Equation 4, where CG gel layer
concentration, CR retentate
concentration, and CROPTIMUM
highest retentate concentration
where diafiltration should be
performed (1).
The CG value for a sample
mixture can be determined from
experimentation by concentrating a
sample on a membrane while
recording and plotting data for
filtrate flux rate compared with log
concentration (concentration
factor). Then a curve can be
extrapolated to filtrate flux rate 0.
The CG value will be the same for
this particular product regardless of
the starting concentration or filtrate
flux rate.
In Figure 4s example, the CG
value is a concentration factor of
approximately 33. Therefore, the
optimal concentration factor to
perform diafiltration would be
0.37 CG 12.2. If the starting
product concentration is 5 mg/mL,
then diafiltration should be
performed when that concentration
reaches 61 mg/mL. If the final
concentration will be less than 61
mg/mL, then diafiltration should
be performed after concentration
unless it is necessary to remove a
specific molecule first.
The ultrafiltration product
selected may dictate your choice of
continuous or discontinuous
diafiltration. Stirred cells and
centrifugal devices are best suited
for discontinuous diafiltration
because of their mode of operation.
Tangential flow devices have the
advantage of being useful for either
diafiltration technique.
A USEFUL STEP
DOWNSTREAM PROCESSING
Diafiltration is a fast and effective
technique for desalting or buffer
exchange of solutions. It can be
performed in a continuous or
discontinuous mode. Continuous
diafiltration usually takes less
volume to achieve the same degree
of salt reduction as discontinuous
diafiltration with sequential dilution
and can be easier to perform.
IN
MAY 2003
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