Nautilus’ Iterative Mapping Early Access Program gives you the unique opportunity to employ our novel single-molecule proteomic analysis method and platform for your research. Our initial offering through the program will enable you to be among the first to deeply explore the functional states of human tau proteins by quantifying up to 768 full-length tau proteoforms in your samples of interest. Even if your project does not involve tau, we strongly encourage and welcome prompt submission of the linked form, as participation is limited.
Find us at US HUPO 2026 in St. Louis, MO from Feb 21-25 to discover how we're redefining proteomics with Iterative Mapping and to learn more about joining our Iterative Mapping Early Access program. At the conference, we're excited to host a lunch seminar featuring Professor Birgit Schilling from the Buck Institute for Research on Aging. Birgit will share how her lab is using Iterative Mapping to explore the roles of tau proteoforms in aging and neurodegeneration. Use the form linked below to schedule a meeting with us at the conference.
On Wednesday, January 14th at 9am PT, Professor Birgit Schilling from the Buck Institute for Research on Aging joins the the Nautilus team to share how her lab is using Iterative Mapping to explore the role of tau proteoforms in aging and neurodegeneration. Don't miss this fantastic opportunity to explore the unique results you can achieve when employing Iterative Mapping in your research. The webinar will also be available on-demand after the live presentation.
In our updated "Proteomics at scale: Current approaches and emerging technologies" white paper, we discuss how Iterative Mapping is designed to overcome tradeoffs between proteome coverage and detail inherent to most proteomics methods. Download the white paper to discover why we need new proteomics methods, to learn how the proteomics landscape is evolving, and to see what makes Iterative Mapping so powerful.