The system uses Bio-Layer Interferometry (BLI), an optical analytical technique that measures patterns between waves of light to determine binding interactions of small molecules, proteins, antibodies, and even cells, determine specificity, calculate titer, characterize affinity, and more. The system utilizes single-use, glass fiber-based biosensors, where the surface chemistry occurs at the very tip of the glass fiber. The biosensor tip is composed of two optical interfaces: an internal reference layer (optical layer) and a biocompatible matrix that minimizes non-specific binding on the surface. This matrix is coated with ligand molecules that bind the target molecules in the samples. During measurement, white light is directed down the biosensor towards the two interfaces at the tip of the biosensor. The reflected beams from each of the two layers interfere constructively or destructively at different wavelengths in the spectrum, creating an interference pattern. When molecules bind to the surface of the biosensor, the thickness of the molecular layer at the tip increases and, thus, the effective distance between the two reflective layers increases too. This causes a shift in the interference pattern of the reflected light. The interferometric profile therefore changes as a function of the optical thickness of the molecular layer (i.e. the number of molecules bound to the biosensor surface). The change in wavelength (nm shift) is reported as a function of time and a classical association/dissociation curve is obtained. Real-time, label-free analysis provides fast, sensitive and accurate measurement of kinetics, affinity and activity of complex formation without the need of generating labelled biomolecules, which is less efficient and informative for analysing biomolecular interactions. BLI also delivers stoichiometric information about binding interactions, allowing the elimination of proteins exhibiting non-optimal binding behaviour. In addition, high sensitivity measurement of binding affinities up to the millimolar range are possible.