Abstract

Encoded combinatorial library technologies have dramatically expanded the chemical space for screening but are usually only analyzed by affinity selection binding. It would be highly advantageous to reformat selection outputs to "one-bead-one-compound" solid-phase libraries, unlocking activity-based and cellular screening capabilities. Here, we describe hydrogel-encapsulated magnetic beads that enable such a transformation. Bulk emulsion polymerization of polyacrylamide hydrogel shells around magnetic microbeads yielded uniform particles (7 ± 2 μm diameter) that are compatible with diverse in-gel functionalization (amine, alkyne, oligonucleotides) and transformations associated with DNA-encoded library synthesis (acylation, enzymatic DNA ligation). In a case study of reformatting mRNA display libraries, transcription from DNA-templated magnetic beads encapsulated in gel particles colocalized both RNA synthesis via hybridization with copolymerized complementary DNA and translation via puromycin labeling. Two control epitope templates (V5, HA) were successfully enriched (50- and 99-fold, respectively) from an NNK5 library bead screen via FACS. Proximity-driven library synthesis in concert with magnetic sample manipulation provides a plausible means for reformatting encoded combinatorial libraries at scale.

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