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Author

Janez Jančar

Bio: Janez Jančar is an academic researcher from BIA Separations (Slovenia). The author has contributed to research in topics: Monolithic HPLC column & Monolith. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 14 publications receiving 425 citations.

Papers
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TL;DR: In this work, methacrylate-based monolithic columns with the bed volume up to 8000 ml are characterized and are found to be incompressible under these operating conditions and resistant to strong alkaline conditions.

75 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the isocratic separation of oligonucleotides in the ion exchange mode on thin GMA-EDMA monoliths in the form of commercially available CIM (Convective interaction media) disks is presented.

66 citations

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TL;DR: It was shown that similar peak resolution can be provided in both gradient and isocratic modes, and it is possible to achieve efficient separations of oligonucleotides and peptides in the ion-exchange mode as well as the separation of small hydrophobic molecules in the reversed-phase mode.
Abstract: High-performance membrane chromatography (HPMC) proved to be a very efficient method for fast protein separations. Recently, it was shown to be applicable also for the isocratic chromatography of plasmid DNA conformations. However, no study about the separation of small molecules has been performed until now. In this work, we investigated the possibility of gradient and isocratic HPMC of small molecules with Convective Interaction Media disks of different chemistries and tried to explain the mechanism that enables their separation. We demonstrated that it is possible to achieve efficient separations of oligonucleotides and peptides in the ion-exchange mode as well as the separation of small hydrophobic molecules in the reversed-phase mode. It was shown that similar peak resolution can be provided in both gradient and isocratic modes.

62 citations

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TL;DR: The CIM disk applied as an enzyme reactor proved to be a successful replacement for conventionally used packed-bed columns and as such it was well suited for on-line monitoring of bioprocesses.

52 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, HETP values and Z factors for different groups of molecules (proteins, DNA, oligonucleotides, peptides, and organic acids) on strong anion exchange CIM disk monolithic columns were determined.
Abstract: Convective Interaction Media® (CIM) disk monolithic columns are specific among the chromatographic columns because of their monolithic structure and extremely short column length. In this work, HETP values and Z factors for different groups of molecules—proteins, DNA, oligonucleotides, peptides, and organic acids on strong anion exchange CIM disk monolithic columns were determined. Results are discussed in terms of the molecule structures and applied to develop different approaches for successful separation of abovementioned group of molecules on these types of columns.

38 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Various purification techniques for higher recovery of glucose oxidase are described here, and issues of enzyme kinetics, stability studies and characterization are addressed.

976 citations

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TL;DR: Continuous-flow processes are considered as a universal lever to overcome restrictions and joint efforts between synthetic and polymer chemists and chemical engineers have resulted in the first continuous-flow devices and microreactors that allow rapid preparation of compounds with minimum workup.
Abstract: As part of the dramatic changes associated with the need for preparing compound libraries in pharmaceutical and agrochemical research laboratories, the search for new technologies that allow automation of synthetic processes has become one of the main topics. Despite this strong trend for automation high-throughput chemistry is still carried out in batches, whereas flow-through processes are rather restricted to production processes. This is far from understandable because the main advantages of that approach are facile automation, reproducibility, safety, and process reliability, because constant reaction parameters can be assured. Indeed, methods and technologies are missing that allow rapid transfer from the research level to process development without time-consuming adaptation and optimization of methods from the laboratory scale to production plant scale. Continuous-flow processes are considered as a universal lever to overcome these restrictions and, only recently, joint efforts between synthetic and polymer chemists and chemical engineers have resulted in the first continuous-flow devices and microreactors; these allow rapid preparation of compounds with minimum workup. Many of these approaches use immobilized reagents and catalysts, which are embedded in a structured flow-through reactor. It is generally accepted, that for achieving best reaction and kinetic parameters for convective-flow processes monolithic materials are ideally suited as solid phases or polymer supports. In addition, immobilization techniques have to be developed that allow facile regeneration of the active species in the reactor.

418 citations

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TL;DR: The present state of the art in the use of enzymes and microorganisms for catalytic oxidation and oxyfunctionalization chemistry is reviewed.

382 citations

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TL;DR: The proteolytic activity of the enzymatic microreactor on chip was demonstrated at different flow rates with the cleavage of fluorescently labeled casein used as a substrate, and the excellent performance of the monolithicmicroreactor was demonstrated with the digestion of myoglobin at the fast flow rate of 0.5 microL/min.
Abstract: Enzymatic microreactors have been prepared in capillaries and on microfluidic chips by immobilizing trypsin on porous polymer monoliths consisting of 2-vinyl-4,4-dimethylazlactone, ethylene dimethacrylate, and acrylamide or 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate. The azlactone functionalities react readily with amine and thiol groups of the enzyme to form stable covalent bonds. The optimized porous properties of the monoliths lead to very low back pressures enabling the use of simple mechanical pumping to carry out both the immobilization of the enzyme from its solution and the subsequent analyses of substrate solutions. The Michealis−Menten kinetic characteristics of the reactors were probed using a low molecular weight substrate: N-α-benzoyl-l-arginine ethyl ester. The effects of immobilization variables such as the concentration of trypsin in solution and percentage of azlactone functionalities in the monolith, as well as the effect of reaction time on the enzymatic activity, and of process variables such as sub...

338 citations

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TL;DR: The current state of unit operations posing as chromatography alternatives--including membrane filtration, aqueous two-phase extraction, three-phase partitioning, precipitation, crystallization, monoliths and membrane chromatography--and their potential to do the unthinkable are reviewed.

325 citations