“…The efficacy of this step can be relatively high, and then the solubilized inactive protein is refolded into its active form with use of diverse approaches. − One of the refolding strategies is the dilution, which reduces denaturant concentration. , The second one is free solution in the presence of several species (e.g., additives, micelles, nanoparticles, − and nanotubes). Another method is solid-state or on-column refolding − (e.g., size-exclusion chromatography (SEC), − ion exchange chromatography (IEC), , immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC), , and hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC) , ), and the most well-known and advanced method, which is an imitation of the in vivo folding called “artificial chaperone-assisted refolding”. ,, Rozema and Gellman developed this method, which has two steps, capturing and stripping . First, hydrophobic patches of denatured protein are shielded by the detergent, and a protein-detergent complex is formed.…”