Madoo Varma
Intel
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Publication
Featured researches published by Madoo Varma.
Nature Medicine | 2012
Jordan V. Price; Stephanie Tangsombatvisit; Guangyu Xu; Jiangtao Yu; Dan Levy; Emily C. Baechler; Or Gozani; Madoo Varma; Paul J. Utz; Chih Long Liu
We developed a new, silicon-based peptide array for a broad range of biological applications, including potential development as a real-time point-of-care platform. We used photolithography on silicon wafers to synthesize microarrays (Intel arrays) that contained every possible overlapping peptide within a linear protein sequence covering the N-terminal tail of human histone H2B. These arrays also included peptides with acetylated and methylated lysine residues, reflecting post-translational modifications of H2B. We defined minimum binding epitopes for commercial antibodies recognizing the modified and unmodified H2B peptides. We further found that this platform is suitable for the highly sensitive characterization of methyltransferases and kinase substrates. The Intel arrays also revealed specific H2B epitopes that are recognized by autoantibodies in individuals with systemic lupus erythematosus who have elevated disease severity. By combining emerging nonfluorescence-based detection methods with an underlying integrated circuit, we are now poised to create a truly transformative proteomics platform with applications in bioscience, drug development and clinical diagnostics.
Analyst | 2012
Grace M. Credo; Xing Su; Kai Wu; Oguz H. Elibol; David J. Liu; Bobby Reddy; Ta Wei Tsai; Brian Dorvel; Jonathan S. Daniels; Rashid Bashir; Madoo Varma
We introduce a label-free approach for sensing polymerase reactions on deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) using a chelator-modified silicon-on-insulator field-effect transistor (SOI-FET) that exhibits selective and reversible electrical response to pyrophosphate anions. The chemical modification of the sensor surface was designed to include rolling-circle amplification (RCA) DNA colonies for locally enhanced pyrophosphate (PPi) signal generation and sensors with immobilized chelators for capture and surface-sensitive detection of diffusible reaction by-products. While detecting arrays of enzymatic base incorporation reactions is typically accomplished using optical fluorescence or chemiluminescence techniques, our results suggest that it is possible to develop scalable and portable PPi-specific sensors and platforms for broad biomedical applications such as DNA sequencing and microbe detection using surface-sensitive electrical readout techniques.
Chemical Communications | 2011
David J. Liu; Grace M. Credo; Xing Su; Kai Wu; Hsiao C. Lim; Oguz H. Elibol; Rashid Bashir; Madoo Varma
A new pyrophosphate (PPi) chelator was designed for surface-sensitive electrical detection of biomolecular reactions. This article describes the synthesis of the PPi-selective receptor, its surface immobilization and application to label-free electrical detection on a silicon-based field-effect transistor (FET) sensor.
Autoimmunity | 2015
David J. Haddon; Justin A. Jarrell; Vivian K. Diep; Hannah E. Wand; Jordan V. Price; Stephanie Tangsombatvisit; Grace M. Credo; Sally Mackey; Cornelia L. Dekker; Emily C. Baechler; Chih Long Liu; Madoo Varma; Paul J. Utz
Abstract The mechanisms underlying development of ribonucleoprotein (RNP) autoantibodies are unclear. The U1-70K protein is the predominant target of RNP autoantibodies, and the RNA binding domain has been shown to be the immunodominant autoantigenic region of U1-70K, although the specific epitopes are not known. To precisely map U1-70K epitopes, we developed silicon-based peptide microarrays with >5700 features, corresponding to 843 unique peptides derived from the U1-70K protein. The microarrays feature overlapping peptides, with single-amino acid resolution in length and location, spanning amino acids 110–170 within the U1-70K RNA binding domain. We evaluated the serum IgG of a cohort of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE; n = 26) using the microarrays, and identified multiple reactive epitopes, including peptides 116–121 and 143–148. Indirect peptide ELISA analysis of the sera of patients with SLE (n = 88) revealed that ∼14% of patients had serum IgG reactivity to 116–121, while reactivity to 143–148 appeared to be limited to a single patient. SLE patients with serum reactivity to 116–121 had significantly lower SLE Disease Activity Index (SLEDAI) scores at the time of sampling, compared to non-reactive patients. Minimal reactivity to the peptides was observed in the sera of healthy controls (n = 92). Competitive ELISA showed antibodies to 116–121 bind a common epitope in U1-70K (68–72) and the matrix protein M1 of human influenza B viruses. Institutional Review Boards approved this study. Knowledge of the precise epitopes of U1-70K autoantibodies may provide insight into the mechanisms of development of anti-RNP, identify potential clinical biomarkers and inform ongoing clinical trails of peptide-based therapeutics.
ACS Nano | 2016
Jung Rok Lee; D. James Haddon; Nidhi Gupta; Jordan V. Price; Grace M. Credo; Vivian K. Diep; Kyunglok Kim; Drew A. Hall; Emily C. Baechler; Michelle Petri; Madoo Varma; Paul J. Utz; Shan X. Wang
Autoantibodies are a hallmark of autoimmune diseases such as lupus and have the potential to be used as biomarkers for diverse diseases, including immunodeficiency, infectious disease, and cancer. More precise detection of antibodies to specific targets is needed to improve diagnosis of such diseases. Here, we report the development of reusable peptide microarrays, based on giant magnetoresistive (GMR) nanosensors optimized for sensitively detecting magnetic nanoparticle labels, for the detection of antibodies with a resolution of a single post-translationally modified amino acid. We have also developed a chemical regeneration scheme to perform multiplex assays with a high level of reproducibility, resulting in greatly reduced experimental costs. In addition, we show that peptides synthesized directly on the nanosensors are approximately two times more sensitive than directly spotted peptides. Reusable peptide nanosensor microarrays enable precise detection of autoantibodies with high resolution and sensitivity and show promise for investigating antibody-mediated immune responses to autoantigens, vaccines, and pathogen-derived antigens as well as other fundamental peptide-protein interactions.
international solid-state circuits conference | 2016
Drew A. Hall; Jonathan S. Daniels; Bibiche M. Geuskens; Noureddine Tayebi; Grace M. Credo; David J. Liu; Handong Li; Kai Wu; Xing Su; Madoo Varma; Oguz H. Elibol
In this paper, we have demonstrated a highly scalable all-electronic approach towards DNA sequencing using CMOS readout electronics coupled with post-processed nanogap transducers. While this test chip demonstrated a small array of 8,192 pixels, a 25mm2 chip could theoretically contain over 12 million pixels including I/O pads. Through careful architectural design choices and selection of a novel transduction scheme, we demonstrate that biosensing, such as DNA sequencing, can be performed on advanced CMOS process nodes.
ACS Sensors | 2018
Xing Su; Noureddine Tayebi; Grace M. Credo; Kai Wu; Oguz H. Elibol; David J. Liu; Jonathan S. Daniels; Handong Li; Drew A. Hall; Madoo Varma
Clinical diagnostic assays that monitor redox enzyme activity are widely used in small, low-cost readout devices for point-of-care monitoring (e.g., a glucometer); however, monitoring non-redox enzymes in real-time using compact electronic devices remains a challenge. We address this problem by using a highly scalable nanogap sensor array to observe electrochemical signals generated by a model non-redox enzyme system, the DNA polymerase-catalyzed incorporation of four modified, redox-tagged nucleotides. Using deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs) tagged with para-aminophenyl monophosphate (pAPP) to form pAP-deoxyribonucleoside tetra-phosphates (AP-dN4Ps), incorporation of the nucleotide analogs by DNA polymerase results in the release of redox inactive pAP-triphosphates (pAPP3) that are converted to redox active small molecules para-aminophenol (pAP) in the presence of phosphatase. In this work, cyclic enzymatic reactions that generated many copies of pAP at each base incorporation site of a DNA template in combination with the highly confined nature of the planar nanogap transducers ( z = 50 nm) produced electrochemical signals that were amplified up to 100,000×. We observed that the maximum signal level and amplification level were dependent on a combination of factors including the base structure of the incorporated nucleotide analogs, nanogap electrode materials, and electrode surface coating. In addition, electrochemical signal amplification by redox cycling in the nanogap is independent of the in-plane geometry of the transducer, thus allowing the nanogap sensors to be highly scalable. Finally, when the DNA template concentration was constrained, the DNA polymerase assay exhibited different zero-order reaction kinetics for each type of base incorporation reaction, resolving the closely related nucleotide analogs.
Biomedical Microdevices | 2011
Bobby Reddy; Brian Dorvel; Jonghyun Go; Pradeep R. Nair; Oguz H. Elibol; Grace M. Credo; Jonathan S. Daniels; Edmond Chow; Xing Su; Madoo Varma; Muhammad A. Alam; Rashid Bashir
Archive | 2012
Oguz H. Elibol; Grace M. Credo; Xing Su; Madoo Varma; Jonathan S. Daniels; Drew A. Hall; Handong Li; Noureddine Tayebi; Kai Wu
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2010
Ashfaque Uddin; Kaveh Milaninia; Oguz H. Elibol; Jonathan S. Daniels; Xing Su; Madoo Varma; Derek Stein; Luke Theogarajan