Encoded Silicon-Chip-Based Platform for Combinatorial Synthesis and Screening.

ACS Comb Sci

Department of Chemistry, Yale University, 225 Prospect Street, New Haven, Connecticut 06511, United States.

Published: April 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Solid-supported chemical libraries are valuable for quickly finding bioactive compounds, but traditional screening methods face challenges like lengthy compound characterization and high false positive rates.
  • A new platform using p-Chips, which are tiny silicon microtransponders with unique IDs, allows for efficient tracking of compounds during synthesis and binding assays without destruction.
  • The p-Chip platform demonstrated a significant reduction in false positives (14% vs. up to 96% in traditional methods) and produced promising results correlating well with established ELISA techniques, suggesting it could greatly enhance high-throughput screening effectiveness.

Article Abstract

Solid-supported chemical libraries have proven useful for the rapid and cost-effective discovery of bioactive compounds. However, traditional on-bead screening involves time-intensive chemical characterization of hit compounds and high false positive rates. Herein, we report a new platform for encoded chemical synthesis and solid-supported screening using p-Chips, microsized silicon microtransponders capable of storing and emitting unique numerical identifiers (IDs). By encoding the structures of library members using p-Chip IDs, we can track compound identities throughout both split-and-pool synthesis and protein binding assays without destructive cleavage. Thanks to the numerical IDs, our p-Chip platform can provide binding constants for library members simply by stripping and reprobing with different protein concentrations, unlike traditional on-bead assays. To showcase these features, we synthesized a library of 108 hemagglutinin (HA) peptide variants using split-and-pool approach, and measured ECs for each variant directly on p-Chips. On-chip ECs obtained from these studies showed excellent correlation (80%) with those obtained using traditional ELISA methods. Our screen also yielded a false positive rate of 14%, markedly superior to that reported for conventional bead-based binding studies (66-96%).1-9 On the basis of these results, we believe the p-Chip platform has the potential to improve the effectiveness of solid-supported high-throughput screening by a significant margin.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscombsci.6b00181DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

traditional on-bead
8
false positive
8
library members
8
p-chip platform
8
encoded silicon-chip-based
4
platform
4
silicon-chip-based platform
4
platform combinatorial
4
combinatorial synthesis
4
screening
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!