Robust and High-Throughput Sample Preparation for (Semi-)Quantitative Analysis of N-Glycosylation Profiles from Plasma Samples

Author(s):  
L. Renee Ruhaak ◽  
Carolin Huhn ◽  
Carolien A. M. Koeleman ◽  
André M. Deelder ◽  
Manfred Wuhrer
Lab on a Chip ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (13) ◽  
pp. 2193-2197 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hao Jiang ◽  
Tingting Zhu ◽  
Hao Zhang ◽  
Jun Nie ◽  
Zeyi Guan ◽  
...  

An optofluidic device interfaces droplet microfluidics with light-sheet fluorescence microscopy for on-chip, high-throughput sample compartmentalization and 3-D imaging.


Author(s):  
Roger Alvis ◽  
Jeff Blackwood ◽  
Sang-Hoon Lee ◽  
Matthew Bray

Abstract Semiconductor devices with critical dimensions less than 20nm are now being manufactured in volume. A challenge facing the failure analysis and process-monitoring community is two-fold. The first challenge of TEM sample prep of such small devices is that the basic need to end-point on a feature-of-interest pushes the imaging limit of the instrument being used to prepare the lamella. The second challenge posed by advanced devices is to prepare an artifact-free lamella from non-planar devices such as finFETs as well as from structures incorporating ‘non-traditional’ materials. These challenges are presently overcome in many advanced logic and memory devices in the focused ion beam-based TEM sample preparation processes by inverting the specimen prior to thinning to electron transparency. This paper reports a highthroughput method for the routine preparation of artifact-free TEM lamella of 20nm thickness, or less.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 100606
Author(s):  
Giuseppina E. Grieco ◽  
Guido Sebastiani ◽  
Daniela Fignani ◽  
Noemi Brusco ◽  
Laura Nigi ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 457-467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott Fulton ◽  
Steve Murphy ◽  
Jenn Reich ◽  
Zachary Van Den Heuvel ◽  
Robert Sakowski ◽  
...  

Pharmaceutics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (7) ◽  
pp. 1019
Author(s):  
Teresa von Linde ◽  
Gzona Bajraktari-Sylejmani ◽  
Walter E. Haefeli ◽  
Jürgen Burhenne ◽  
Johanna Weiss ◽  
...  

The peptide transporter PEPT-1 (SLC15A1) plays a major role in nutritional supply with amino acids by mediating the intestinal influx of dipeptides and tripeptides generated during food digestion. Its role in the uptake of small bioactive peptides and various therapeutics makes it an important target for the investigation of the systemic absorption of small peptide-like active compounds and prodrug strategies of poorly absorbed therapeutics. The dipeptide glycyl-sarcosine (Gly-Sar), which comprises an N-methylated peptide bond that increases stability against enzymatic degradation, is widely utilized for studying PEPT-1-mediated transport. To support experiments on PEPT-1 inhibitor screening to identify potential substrates, we developed a highly sensitive Gly-Sar quantification assay for Caco-2 cell lysates with a dynamic range of 0.1 to 1000 ng/mL (lower limit of quantification 0.68 nM) in 50 µL of cell lysate. The assay was validated following the applicable recommendations for bioanalytic method validation of the FDA and EMA. Sample preparation and quantification were established in 96-well cell culture plates that were also used for the cellular uptake studies, resulting in a rapid and robust screening assay for PEPT-1 inhibitors. This sample preparation principle, combined with the high sensitivity of the UPLC-MS/MS quantification, is suitable for screening assays for PEPT-1 inhibitors and substrates in high-throughput formats and holds the potential for automation. Applicability was demonstrated by IC50 determinations of the known PEPT-1 inhibitor losartan, the known substrates glycyl-proline (Gly-Pro), and valaciclovir, the prodrug of aciclovir, which itself is no substrate of PEPT-1 and consequently showed no inhibition in our assay.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Chen ◽  
Nurgul Kaplan Lease ◽  
Jennifer Gin ◽  
Tad Ogorzalek ◽  
Paul D. Adams ◽  
...  

Manual proteomic sample preparation methods limit sample throughput and often lead to poor data quality when thousands of samples must be analyzed. Automated workflows are increasingly used to overcome these issues for some (or even all) of the sample preparation steps. Here, we detail three optimised step-by-step protocols to: (A) lyse Gram-negative bacteria and fungal cells; (B) quantify the amount of protein extracted; and (C) normalize the amount of protein and set up tryptic digestion. These protocols have been developed to facilitate rapid, low variance sample preparation of hundreds of samples, be easily implemented on widely-available Beckman-Coulter Biomek automated liquid handlers, and allow flexibility for future protocol development. By using this workflow 50 micrograms of peptides for 96 samples can be prepared for tryptic digestion in under an hour. We validate these protocols by analyzing 47 E. coli and R. toruloides samples and show that this modular workflow provides robust, reproducible proteomic samples for high-throughput applications. The expected results from these protocols are 94 peptide samples from Gram-negative bacterial and fungal cells prepared for bottom-up quantitative proteomic analysis without the need for desalting column cleanup and with peptide variance (CVs) below 15%.


Bioanalysis ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenbin Zhang ◽  
Minyang Zheng ◽  
Yufen Zhao ◽  
Perry G Wang

Sample preparation and separation methods determine the sensitivity and the quantification accuracy of the proteomics analysis. This article covers a comprehensive review of the recent technique development of high-throughput and high-sensitivity sample preparation and separation methods in proteomics research.


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