High-throughput screening is a common strategy used to identify compounds that modulate biochemical activities, but many approaches depend on cumbersome fluorescent reporters or antibodies and often produce false-positive hits. The development of "label-free" assays addresses many of these limitations, but current approaches still lack the throughput needed for applications in drug discovery. This paper describes a high-throughput, label-free assay that combines self-assembled monolayers with mass spectrometry, in a technique called SAMDI, as a tool for screening libraries of 100 000 compounds in one day. This method is fast, has high discrimination, and is amenable to a broad range of chemical and biological applications. © 2011 American Chemical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Gurard-Levin, Z. A., Scholle, M. D., Eisenberg, A. H., & Mrksich, M. (2011). High-throughput screening of small molecule libraries using SAMDI mass spectrometry. ACS Combinatorial Science, 13(4), 347–350. https://doi.org/10.1021/co2000373
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