Achieving High Resolution Separation of Oligonucleotides
Achieving High Resolution Separation of Oligonucleotides
Achieving High‑Resolution Separation
of Oligonucleotides with Novel PRP‑Z2
HPLC Columns
Oligonucleotide therapeutics and advanced nucleic
acid tools have rapidly transitioned from niche research
reagents to key components of commercial drug develop-
ment pipelines. Consequently, contract development and
manufacturing organizations (CDMOs) and institutional
research cores face increasing demand for sophisticated
chromatographic support, including high-resolution
impurity profiling, length ladder characterization, and
robust system suitability testing across a broad range
of oligonucleotide sizes and chemical modifications.
These expanding requirements place significant
stress on conventional reversed-phase LC platforms.
Silica-based stationary phases, which dominate small-
molecule separations, are inherently limited by pH
and temperature instability. Furthermore, silica phases
are prone to hydrolytic degradation and progressive
loss of efficiency under typical oligonucleotide separation
conditions (>60°C and ion-pairing agents). The exposure
of residual silanols to the separation conditions, leaves
active metal sites from degraded silica, which can
introduce secondary interactions with the anionic
phosphate backbone of oligonucleotides, leading to
peak tailing, variable recoveries, and difficulties in
quantifying low-level impurities.
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