Fluidic Analytics’ game-changing protein analysis technology recognised with high-profile awards

Fluidity One-W wins SLAS new product award for enabling in-solution interaction analysis of challenging proteins

Fluidity One-W wins SLAS new product award for enabling in-solution interaction analysis of challenging proteins

CAMBRIDGE, UK (July 30, 2019)Fluidic Analytics Ltd, a pioneer in protein analysis and the company behind in-solution diffusional sizing, has received a prestigious new product award at the recent SLAS Europe Conference for its Fluidity One-W instrument - launching later this year. The award is the latest in a string of recognition for the company’s game-changing microfluidic diffusional sizing (MDS) technology, including a spot in the Top 10 Innovations from The Scientist in 2018.

Fluidic Analytics’ Fluidity One-W instrument is uniquely able to assess on-target protein interactions in solution, even in crude biological backgrounds such as cell lysates or blood plasma. This allows researchers to attain detailed analyses of proteins in near-native states and in natural environments – enabling earlier, more accurate analysis of targets for faster decision making. Fluidic Analytics has made this possible with its proprietary diffusional sizing technology, based on the well-understood relationship between size and diffusion rate, yielding absolute size measurements. The measurements provided by the Fluidity One-W confirm the identity of complexes which allow scientists to control for off-target binding and false positive measurements, delivering zero ambiguity for the utmost confidence in results.

These unique abilities combined with high sensitivity are enabling researchers to study challenging proteins that traditionally prove problematic for other systems, including membrane proteins, multi-protein complexes and intrinsically disordered proteins. An excellent example of this was recently presented by Professor Sara Linse of Lund University during the FEBS/EMBO Women in Science Award Lecture at the FEBS 2019 conference.

The lecture discussed soon-to-be-published research on the mechanism of amyloid ß aggregation and the role of inhibitors. Amyloid ß is a key molecule of interest in Alzheimer’s disease and is notoriously difficult to study—sometimes referred to as the ‘peptide from hell’—however Professor Linse discussed how Fluidic Analytics’ diffusional sizing technology was able to provide the team with confident analysis where other platforms struggled.

This research, when published later this year, will join a growing number of publications featuring Fluidic Analytics’ diffusional sizing instruments covering protein-lipid interactions, oligomerization, aggregation and difficult-to-study protein interactions.

Andrew Lynn, Chief Executive Officer at Fluidic Analytics commented, “It’s really exciting to see our diffusional sizing technology being recognised with high-profile awards and to be helping scientists in an increasing number of great research projects each day. Our goal at Fluidic Analytics is to enable a better understanding of proteins and protein interactions for better decision-making; so scientists can ensure that their work has the greatest impact. The launch of the Fluidity One-W is an important step towards this goal, providing scientists with new capabilities to accurately study a range of challenging proteins and protein interactions that couldn’t be accurately studied before. We believe that these new capabilities will facilitate significant advancements in human health, such as identifying new therapeutic avenues for Alzheimer’s disease – one of the high-impact areas already benefitting from our technology.”

For more information, please visit www.fluidic.com.

Editor’s notes

About Fluidic Analytics

Fluidic Analytics- Understand the machinery of life with the right tools, protein researchers can change the world around us.

Our award-winning technologies open doors for scientists to understand proteins and their behaviour better than ever before. By characterizing proteins and their interactions, scientists can make better decisions about how we diagnose diseases, develop treatments and maintain our personal well-being. Our revolutionary technologies give researchers a fundamentally new way to analyse proteins without compromise, because we truly believe the right tools in the right hands will change the world.

www.fluidic.com

MORE ON THIS TOPIC