J
Jörn Glökler
Researcher at Technical University of Applied Sciences Wildau
Publications - 44
Citations - 2034
Jörn Glökler is an academic researcher from Technical University of Applied Sciences Wildau. The author has contributed to research in topics: Protein microarray & Aptamer. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 43 publications receiving 1844 citations. Previous affiliations of Jörn Glökler include Max Planck Society & Universiti Sains Malaysia.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Toward optimized antibody microarrays: a comparison of current microarray support materials.
Philipp Angenendt,Jörn Glökler,Derek Murphy,Hans Lehrach,Dolores J. Cahill,Dolores J. Cahill +5 more
TL;DR: The results indicate the need to test each antibody to be used on an antibody array and to select the microarray coating based on experimental requirements.
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Probing the SELEX Process with Next-Generation Sequencing
Tatjana Schütze,Barbara Wilhelm,Nicole Greiner,Hannsjörg Braun,Franziska Peter,Mario Mörl,Volker A. Erdmann,Hans Lehrach,Zoltán Konthur,Marcus Menger,Peter F. Arndt,Jörn Glökler +11 more
TL;DR: A new selection scheme is suggested that avoids a high number of iterative selection rounds while reducing time, PCR bias, and artifacts and high affinity aptamers can be readily identified simply by copy number enrichment in the first selection rounds.
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Next generation of protein microarray support materials:: Evaluation for protein and antibody microarray applications
TL;DR: The performance of protein and antibody microarrays is dependent on various factors, one of which is the use of an appropriate microarray surface for the immobilisation of either protein or antibody samples as mentioned in this paper.
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Standardization and quality management in next-generation sequencing.
TL;DR: Current standardization efforts and quality management initiatives from companies, organizations and societies in form of published studies and ongoing projects will exert a decisive influence on traceability and reproducibility of sequence data.
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Shining a light on LAMP assays— A comparison of LAMP visualization methods including the novel use of berberine
TL;DR: Direct and indirect methods to visualize the amplification of potato spindle tuber viroid by loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) are tested and features important for one-pot in-field applications are compared.