Automated Laser-Transfer Synthesis of High-Density Microarrays for Infectious Disease Screening

14Citations
Citations of this article
11Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Laser-induced forward transfer (LIFT) is a rapid laser-patterning technique for high-throughput combinatorial synthesis directly on glass slides. A lack of automation and precision limits LIFT applications to simple proof-of-concept syntheses of fewer than 100 compounds. Here, an automated synthesis instrument is reported that combines laser transfer and robotics for parallel synthesis in a microarray format with up to 10 000 individual reactions cm−2. An optimized pipeline for amide bond formation is the basis for preparing complex peptide microarrays with thousands of different sequences in high yield with high reproducibility. The resulting peptide arrays are of higher quality than commercial peptide arrays. More than 4800 15-residue peptides resembling the entire Ebola virus proteome on a microarray are synthesized to study the antibody response of an Ebola virus infection survivor. Known and unknown epitopes that serve now as a basis for Ebola diagnostic development are identified. The versatility and precision of the synthesizer is demonstrated by in situ synthesis of fluorescent molecules via Schiff base reaction and multi-step patterning of precisely definable amounts of fluorophores. This automated laser transfer synthesis approach opens new avenues for high-throughput chemical synthesis and biological screening.

References Powered by Scopus

NIH Image to ImageJ: 25 years of image analysis

47050Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Light-directed, spatially addressable parallel chemical synthesis

2529Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Use of peptide synthesis to probe viral antigens for epitopes to a resolution of a single amino acid

1345Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Cited by Powered by Scopus

Laser-Induced Transfer of Functional Materials

19Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Laser-induced forward transfer based laser bioprinting in biomedical applications

16Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Solid Ink Laser Patterning for High-Resolution Information Labels with Supervised Learning Readout

8Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Paris, G., Heidepriem, J., Tsouka, A., Liu, Y., Mattes, D. S., Pinzón Martín, S., … Loeffler, F. F. (2022). Automated Laser-Transfer Synthesis of High-Density Microarrays for Infectious Disease Screening. Advanced Materials, 34(23). https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202200359

Readers' Seniority

Tooltip

PhD / Post grad / Masters / Doc 2

33%

Researcher 2

33%

Professor / Associate Prof. 1

17%

Lecturer / Post doc 1

17%

Readers' Discipline

Tooltip

Chemistry 2

40%

Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Bi... 1

20%

Linguistics 1

20%

Materials Science 1

20%

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free