Transform Your Daily Lab Operations with Automation - Proteomics Workflows

Bringing laboratory automation to life with Andrew+ and OneLab
This webinar series explores how Andrew+ automated liquid handling and OneLab workflow software support consistent, traceable and efficient laboratory operations. Through application‑focused episodes, you will see how automation can be successfully integrated into everyday laboratory workflows, from method development to routine and regulated environments, supported by customer experiences and testimonials.
Episode 1 – Proteomics Workflows
Overview
Automation plays a key role in modern proteomics, where reproducibility and consistency are essential. In this episode, we explore how automated liquid handling supports robust, scalable sample preparation workflows while reducing manual variability across studies, with insights shared directly from proteomics laboratories using automation in practice.
Key highlights
- Apply automation across proteomics workflows including digestion, desalting, peptide quantification and normalization
- Reduce batch effects and improve reproducibility in long-term and large-scale studies
- Support evolving proteomics methods with flexible, reliable automation
Speakers
Customer testimonials:
Imperial College London – National Phenome Centre
- A leading UK-based academic research centre specialising in large-scale, high‑throughput proteomics and multi‑omics studies.
In this episode, the team shares how automated liquid handling has been integrated into routine proteomics sample preparation workflows — from protein assays and digestion to desalting, peptide quantification and sample normalisation — enabling highly reproducible results while significantly reducing batch variation across long-term studies.
MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences
- A biomedical research institute focused on understanding the molecular basis of human disease, with strong expertise in proteomics and metabolomics.
The laboratory provides insight into how automation supports attention‑intensive workflows such as concentration normalisation and solid phase extraction (SPE), helping to improve consistency, usability and throughput in proteomics sample preparation.
University of Leicester – Van Geest Multiomics Facility
- A university-based multiomics facility supporting large‑scale clinical and translational research projects.
In this episode, the facility explains how automated liquid handling has transformed proteomics workflows for large cohort studies, enabling scalable, flexible sample preparation while minimising batch effects and supporting highly reproducible biomarker research.
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