Founding offer · lifetime membership for a single £24, exclusive to our first members · closes 20 June Claim your place →
Global Research Partnerships £24 Lifetime Log inCreate free account

Funded Projects › HORIZON

EngToTarget · ENGINEERING MULTIVALENCY FOR SUPERSELECTIVE RECOGNITION OF PATHOGEN TARGETS

HORIZONStatus: SIGNED1 December 202630 November 2031EU funding €1,996,846Call ERC-2025-COG

The recent pandemic has emphasised the need to rapidly develop materials that can detect, inhibit and destroy viruses and other pathogens. Antibodies achieve selective recognition of biological targets at ultralow concentrations via multivalent interactions, i.e. the cooperative binding of multiple sites to cognate receptors. While antibody deployment is ubiquitous in diagnostics and therapy, their animal-based manufacturing is costly, time-consuming, lacks universal applicability and raises ethical concerns following EU Directive 2010/63/EU. Recent theoretical studies have established novel material design principles for the emergence of so-called superselectivity, yet the required detailed interplay of valency and individual bond strength with repulsive steric interactions remains inaccessible with available synthetic pathways.The aim of EngToTarget is to establish a closed-loop engineering approach to superselective nanoparticles that is based on the acquisition, analysis and learning from large data sets. An experimental platform will be developed that combines robotic hardware, synthetic procedures amenable to automation, high-throughput characterisation and advanced statistical methods. Influenza, cholera and SARS-CoV-2 will be used as case studies to demonstrate the effectiveness of the method for achieving greatly enhanced selectivity and target discrimination in physiological fluids. Such nanoparticles will be deployed in novel detection principles that are enabled by superselectivity and validated for their effectiveness in diagnostic assays. The methodology is generic, affordable and open-source, allowing for rapid adaption to a broad range of emerging viruses or other biological targets (e.g. cancer biomarkers) and serving a global community of experimentalists with rational, effective and expedited approaches to nanoparticle engineering.

Consortium · 2 organisations

coordinator

TECHNISCHE UNIVERSITAET MUENCHEN

DE · €1,996,846

associatedPartner

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON

UK

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

← Find collaborators and more funded projects

Source: CORDIS, Publications Office of the European Union. Global Research Partnerships surfaces open EU research data to help you find collaborators; we are not affiliated with the European Union.