HIC separation mechanism
HIC columns and how to select the right one
HPLC or UHPLC HIC columns share they contain particles that with a hydrophobic surface. The particles can be of different size (e.g. 2-13 µm in diameter), porous or non-porous and of different base materials such as silica or polymethacrylate. In addition, the surface hydrophobicity is achieved by hydrophobic ligands. Popular functional groups that are coupled to the base matrix of the particles are phenyl, butyl, ether, or ethyl. The table below gives insight into the advantages and disadvantages of the different materials available.
|
|
Advantage |
Disadvantage |
Suited for |
Base Matrix |
Polymethacrylate/ Polymeric |
High pH stability |
Tendency to swell in organic solvents (not typical for HIC) |
Any separation independent from pH, standard analyses |
Silica |
High mechanical stability |
Limited pH stability (2.5-8) |
Separations at low pH and if organic solvents of > 20 % are required |
Porosity |
Porous |
Large surface area and high binding capacity |
High mass transfer resistance, slower separations |
Best for preparative applications due to high binding capacity |
Non-porous |
Reduced mass transfer resistance (high separation performance and fast separations) |
Low binding capacity |
Standard for analytical applications |
Particle Size |
Up to 5 µm |
Best separation performance, mainly compatible with UHPLC |
Higher back-pressure as compared to larger particles |
UHPLC and optimized HPLC analyses |
5-10 µm |
Medium separation performance and back-pressure |
|
Optimal for HPLC analyses |
> 10 µm |
Low back-pressure |
Low separation performance |
For preparative applications |
The ligand dictates the hydrophobicity of the stationary phase, though the base matrix and ligand density also impact on the overall hydrophobicity of the stationary phase. The most common ligand used for protein analysis is butyl, while phenyl is used for less hydrophobic molecules such as nucleic acids.
As a rule of thumb, less hydrophobic molecules require stationary phases with high hydrophobicity while highly hydrophobic molecules are better separated on stationary phases with lower hydrophobicity.
Applications of HIC columns
Drug-Antibody-Ratio (DAR) analysis of Antibody-Drug-Conjugates (ADCs)
ADCs are therapeutics that combine the specific binding capability of antibodies with chemotherapeutics to achieve site-specific cytotoxicity. The average number of cytotoxins (drugs) an antibody carries determines the efficacy of the therapeutic. As each drug modification increases the overall hydrophobicity of the ADC, the drug-antibody-ratio is typically determined by HIC. Tosoh offers columns designed for ADC analysis: TSKgel HIC-ADC columns
Protein modifications analysis in proteins
HIC is sensitive to small modifications in proteins as they alter the overall hydrophobicity of the protein. These include oxidations and reductions as well as deamidations that can be detected by HIC.
Hydrophobicity screening in protein drug candidates
Highly hydrophobic molecules are more prone to aggregate and faster clearance. Analyzing promising protein-based drug candidates by HIC elucidates their overall hydrophobicity and helps excluding molecules early in the development that would likely generate hydrophobicity-related issues in later development stages.
TSKgel hydrophobic interaction chromatography columns