Filtration and concentration

Filtration and concentration

Filtration and concentration techniques are essential tools in modern biochemistry and molecular biology laboratories. They enable efficient sample preparation for downstream analytical workflows, including protein purification, nucleic acid isolation, and biomolecular characterization. These methods ensure optimal recovery, purity, and concentration of biological samples prior to advanced analytical or functional studies.

Key Techniques

Ultrafiltration utilizes semi-permeable membranes to selectively retain high molecular weight biomolecules—such as proteins and viral particles—while permitting salts, solvents, and small molecules to pass through. Separation is typically driven by centrifugal force or applied pressure, allowing rapid and controlled concentration of target analytes.

Centrifugal concentrators enable concentration factors ranging from 50- to 400-fold, while maintaining high recovery rates (often exceeding 90%) and minimizing nonspecific protein binding.

Microfiltration serves as a complementary approach for sample clarification and sterilization. Using membrane pore sizes typically between 0.2 and 0.45 μm, this technique effectively removes particulates and microbial contaminants without compromising the structural integrity of sensitive biological samples.

Biochemical Applications

In lipid and protein biochemistry, these devices concentrate enzymes or antibodies from culture supernatants, facilitating ELISA or electrophoresis prep. For molecular biology, they desalt PCR primers, purify NGS libraries, or isolate viruses, preserving pH and ionic strength unlike precipitation methods.