
Advancing next-generation proteomics with single-molecule Iterative Mapping
Wednesday, January 14 at 17:00 GMT | 18:00 CET | 12:00 EST | 09:00 PST
Discover how Iterative Mapping is helping to reshape proteomic analysis. This single-molecule approach enables comprehensive proteome profiling with high sensitivity and quantitative accuracy, allowing researchers to study proteins and proteoforms across the full complexity of the proteome.
Rather than focusing solely on protein detection, Iterative Mapping captures information at the level of individual protein molecules, supporting robust quantification of defined proteins and proteoforms and generating datasets suitable for advanced computational and AI-driven analysis.
In this webinar, Dr. Birgit Schilling, Professor and Director of the Mass Spectrometry Core at the Buck Institute for Research on Aging, will share how her laboratory is applying Iterative Mapping to investigate tau proteoforms and their role in aging and age-associated neurodegenerative disease. She will discuss how molecule-level protein analysis is enabling new insights into proteoform heterogeneity and biological function that are difficult to achieve using conventional proteomic approaches.
Dr. Parag Mallick and Dr. Sheri Wilcox of Nautilus Biotechnology will then place these findings in a broader proteomics context, presenting data that illustrate the quantitative performance of Iterative Mapping in complex protein mixtures and disease-relevant proteoforms, including tau.
Dr. Mallick and Dr. Wilcox will also discuss how Nautilus Biotechnology can work with clients to bring Iterative Mapping into their lab.
Key learning objectives:
- Discover the quantitative benefits of Iterative Mapping for proteomics analysis
- Explore how Iterative Mapping opens new research pathways and may deeply enhance biological understanding
- Learn how you can work with Nautilus Biotechnology to bring Iterative Mapping into your lab
Who should attend?
- Genomics, transcriptomics, and other ‘omics or multiomics researchers looking for a new and accessible way to incorporate proteomics into their workflows.
- Proteomics researchers looking to interrogate the full proteome at scale more deeply.
- Neuroscientists interested in learning how tau and its many proteoforms shape their biology of interest.
Certificate of attendance
If you attend the live webinar, you will automatically receive a certificate of attendance, including a learning outcomes summary, for continuing education purposes.
If you view the on-demand webinar, you can request a certificate of attendance by emailing editor@selectscience.net.
Speakers



Moderator
