Publications by authors named "Annette Brodte"

Drug discovery programs are moving increasingly toward phenotypic imaging assays to model disease-relevant pathways and phenotypes in vitro. These assays offer richer information than target-optimized assays by investigating multiple cellular pathways simultaneously and producing multiplexed readouts. However, extracting the desired information from complex image data poses significant challenges, preventing broad adoption of more sophisticated phenotypic assays.

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Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) is a powerful method for obtaining detailed molecular interaction parameters. Modern instrumentation with its increased throughput has enabled routine screening by SPR in hit-to-lead and lead optimization programs, and SPR has become a mainstream drug discovery technology. However, the processing and reporting of SPR data in drug discovery are typically performed manually, which is both time-consuming and tedious.

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Recent technological advances in high-content screening instrumentation have increased its ease of use and throughput, expanding the application of high-content screening to the early stages of drug discovery. However, high-content screens produce complex data sets, presenting a challenge for both extraction and interpretation of meaningful information. This shifts the high-content screening process bottleneck from the experimental to the analytical stage.

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