Abstract
FOLLOWING Porath and Flodin's description1 in 1959 of gel filtration as a fractionation method, it has been regularly used in this laboratory for separation of proteins and polysaccharides from sugar cane juice and sugar factory syrups. Unpublished results of the Swedish workers suggested that the method might be extended to the fractionation of substances in a narrow range of quite low molecular weights. Because of the possibilities of the method materials other than cross-linked dextran have been investigated here as alternative media for gel filtration.
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References
Porath, J., and Flodin, P., Nature, 183, 1657 (1959).
Jones, J. K. N., Wall, R. A., and Pittet, A. O., Chem. and Indust., 1197 (1959); Canad. J. Chem., 38, 2285 (1960).
Hough, L., Priddle, J. E., and Theobald, R. S., Chem. and Indust., 900 (1960).
Jones, J. K. N., and Wall, R. A., Canad. J. Chem., 38, 2290 (1960).
Vaughan, M. F., Nature, 188, 55 (1960).
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CORTIS-JONES, B. ‘Gel Filtration’ of Organic Compounds. Nature 191, 272–273 (1961). https://doi.org/10.1038/191272a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/191272a0
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