High-throughput antibody screening with high-quality factor nanophotonics and bioprinting

Publication date

2024-11-27

Authors

Abdollahramezani, Sajjad
Omo-Lamai, Darrell
Bosman, Gerlof P.ISNI 0000000492481509
Hemmatyar, Omid
Dagli, Sahil
Dolia, Varun
Chang, Kai
Güsken, Nicholas A
Delgado, Hamish Carr
Boons, Geert-JanORCID 0000-0003-3111-5954ISNI 0000000120249047

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Document Type

/dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/workingpaper/preprint
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Empirical investigation of the quintillion-scale, functionally diverse antibody repertoires that can be generated synthetically or naturally is critical for identifying potential biotherapeutic leads, yet remains burdensome. We present high-throughput nanophotonics- and bioprinter-enabled screening (HT-NaBS), a multiplexed assay for large-scale, sample-efficient, and rapid characterization of antibody libraries. Our platform is built upon independently addressable pixelated nanoantennas exhibiting wavelength-scale mode volumes, high-quality factors (high-Q) exceeding 5000, and pattern densities exceeding one million sensors per square centimeter. Our custom-built acoustic bioprinter enables individual sensor functionalization via the deposition of picoliter droplets from a library of capture antigens at rates up to 25,000 droplets per second. We detect subtle differentiation in the target binding signature through spatially-resolved spectral imaging of hundreds of resonators simultaneously, elucidating antigen-antibody binding kinetic rates, affinity constant, and specificity. We demonstrate HT-NaBS on a panel of antibodies targeting SARS-CoV-2, Influenza A, and Influenza B antigens, with a sub-picomolar limit of detection within 30 minutes. Furthermore, through epitope binning analysis, we demonstrate the competence and diversity of a library of native antibodies targeting functional epitopes on a priority pathogen (H5N1 bird flu) and on glycosylated therapeutic Cetuximab antibodies against epidermal growth factor receptor. With a roadmap to image tens of thousands of sensors simultaneously, this high-throughput, resource-efficient, and label-free platform can rapidly screen for high-affinity and broad epitope coverage, accelerating biotherapeutic discovery and de novo protein design.

Keywords

SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Abdollahramezani, S, Omo-Lamai, D, Bosman, G, Hemmatyar, O, Dagli, S, Dolia, V, Chang, K, Güsken, N A, Delgado, H C, Boons, G-J, Brongersma, M L, Safir, F, Khuri-Yakub, B T, Moradifar, P & Dionne, J 2024 'High-throughput antibody screening with high-quality factor nanophotonics and bioprinting' arXiv , arXiv. https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2411.18557