Maarten L. Smit
Papers
2
Total Citations
54
H-Index
2
About
Maarten L. Smit is a researcher specializing in laboratory automation and molecular diagnostics, with a particular focus on developing high-throughput methods for genetic analysis. His work addresses a critical challenge in clinical genetics: the growing demand for DNA mutation analysis driven by expanding knowledge of the hereditary basis of human disease. Smit's most notable contributions center on the integration of robotic workstations with molecular biology techniques to streamline and scale genetic testing workflows. His 2000 study demonstrated that DNA could be reliably extracted and amplified from whole blood in a fully automated pipeline, representing a significant advance over the manual, low-throughput methods that preceded it. Building on this foundation, his 2001 work introduced semiautomated mutation detection using molecular beacons — fluorescent probes capable of identifying specific genetic variants with high sensitivity — further enhancing the accuracy and efficiency of diagnostic pipelines. With a combined citation count of 54 across his two most prominent works, Smit's research has meaningfully influenced the field of clinical molecular diagnostics. His contributions were particularly timely, emerging at a moment when genetic testing was transitioning from a research curiosity to a routine clinical tool, and his automation-focused approach helped pave the way for the high-throughput diagnostic laboratories commonplace today.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
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