Equilibrium partitioning of Ficoll in composite hydrogels

Equilibrium partition coefficients ( Φ, the concentration in the gel divided by that in free solution) of fluorescein-labeled Ficolls in pure agarose and agarose–dextran composite gels were measured as a function of gel composition and Ficoll size. The four narrow fractions of Ficoll, a spherical po...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of colloid and interface science 2004-09, Vol.277 (2), p.404-409
Hauptverfasser: Kosto, Kimberly B, Panuganti, Swapna, Deen, William M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Equilibrium partition coefficients ( Φ, the concentration in the gel divided by that in free solution) of fluorescein-labeled Ficolls in pure agarose and agarose–dextran composite gels were measured as a function of gel composition and Ficoll size. The four narrow fractions of Ficoll, a spherical polysaccharide, had Stokes–Einstein radii ranging from 2.7 to 5.9 nm. Gels with agarose volume fractions of 0.040 and 0.080 were studied, with dextran volume fractions (calculated as if the chain were a long fiber) up to 0.011. As expected, Φ generally decreased as the Ficoll size increased (for a given gel composition) or as the amount of dextran incorporated into the gel increased (for a given agarose concentration and Ficoll size). The decrease in Φ that accompanied dextran addition was predicted well by an excluded volume theory in which agarose and dextran were both treated as rigid, straight, randomly positioned and oriented fibers. Modeling dextran as a spherical coil within a fibrous agarose gel produced much less accurate predictions. The diffusional permeabilities of these gels were assessed by combining the current partitioning data with relative diffusivities ( K d, the diffusivity in the gel divided by that in free solution) reported previously. The values of ΦK d for a synthetic gel with 8.0% agarose and 1.1% dextran (by volume) were found to be very similar to those for the glomerular basement membrane, a physiologically important material which also has a total solids content of ∼10%.
ISSN:0021-9797
1095-7103
DOI:10.1016/j.jcis.2004.04.063