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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Marc Busnel is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Marc Busnel.


Analytical Chemistry | 2010

High Capacity Capillary Electrophoresis-Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry: Coupling a Porous Sheathless Interface with Transient-Isotachophoresis

Jean-Marc Busnel; Bart Schoenmaker; Rawi Ramautar; Alegría Carrasco-Pancorbo; Chitra K. Ratnayake; Jerald S. Feitelson; Jeff Chapman; André M. Deelder; Oleg A. Mayboroda

A sheathless interface making use of a porous tip has been used for coupling capillary electrophoresis and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. First, effective flow rates using the interface have been characterized. It was found that the interface is capable of generating a stable spray with flow rates ranging from below 10 nL/min to >340 nL/min, enabling its use in either the mass or concentration-sensitive region of the electrospray process. Subsequently, by analyzing peptide mixtures of increasing complexity, we have demonstrated that this platform provides exquisite sensitivity enabling the detection of very low amounts of materials with very high resolving power. Transient isotachophoresis (t-ITP) can also be integrated with this setup to increase the mass loading of the system while maintaining peak efficiency and resolution. Concentration limits of detection in the subnanomolar or nanomolar range can be achieved with or without t-ITP, respectively. The application of a vacuum at the inlet of the separation capillary further allowed the peak capacity of the system to be improved while also enhancing its efficiency. As a final step in this study, it was demonstrated that the intrinsic properties of the interface allows the use of coated noncharged surfaces so that very high peak capacities can be achieved.


Analytical Chemistry | 2012

Enhancing the coverage of the urinary metabolome by sheathless capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry.

Rawi Ramautar; Jean-Marc Busnel; André M. Deelder; Oleg A. Mayboroda

Sheathless capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry (CE-MS), using a porous tip sprayer, is proposed for the first time for highly sensitive metabolic profiling of human urine. A representative metabolite mixture and human urine were used for evaluation of the sheathless CE-MS platform. For test compounds, relative standard deviations (RSDs) for migration times and peak areas were below 2% and 12%, respectively, and an injection volume of only ∼8 nL resulted in detection limits between 11 and 120 nM. Approximately 900 molecular features were detected in human urine by sheathless CE-MS whereas about 300 molecular features were found with classical sheath-liquid CE-MS. This difference can probably be attributed to an improved ionization efficiency and increased sensitivity at low flow-rate conditions. The integration of transient-isotachophoresis (t-ITP) as an in-capillary preconcentration procedure in sheathless CE-MS further resulted in subnanomolar limits of detection for compounds of the metabolite mixture, and more than 1300 molecular features were observed in urine. Compared to the classical CE-MS approaches, the integration of t-ITP combined with the use of a sheathless interface provides up to 2 orders of magnitude sensitivity improvement. Hence, sheathless CE-MS can be used for in-depth metabolic profiling of biological samples, and we anticipate that this approach will yield unique information in the field of metabolomics.


Analytical Chemistry | 2012

Ultra-low flow electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry for improved ionization efficiency in phosphoproteomics.

Anthonius A. M. Heemskerk; Jean-Marc Busnel; Bart Schoenmaker; Rico Derks; Oleg I. Klychnikov; Paul J. Hensbergen; André M. Deelder; Oleg A. Mayboroda

The potential benefits of ultra-low flow electrospray ionization (ESI) for the analysis of phosphopeptides in proteomics was investigated. First, the relative flow dependent ionization efficiency of nonphosphorylated vs multiplyphosphorylated peptides was characterized by infusion of a five synthetic peptide mix with zero to four phophorylation sites at flow rates ranging from 4.5 to 500 nL/min. Most importantly, similar to what was found earlier by Schmidt et al., it has been verified that at flow rates below 20 nL/min the relative peak intensities for the various peptides show a trend toward an equimolar response, which would be highly beneficial in phosphoproteomic analysis. As the technology to achieve liquid chromatography separation at flow rates below 20 nL/min is not readily available, a sheathless capillary electrophoresis-electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry (CE-ESI-MS) strategy based on the use of a neutrally coated separation capillary was used to develop an analytical strategy at flow rates as low as 6.6 nL/min. An in-line preconcentration technique, namely, transient isotachophoresis (t-ITP), to achieve efficient separation while using larger volume injections (37% of capillary thus 250 nL) was incorporated to achieve even greater sample concentration sensitivities. The developed t-ITP-ESI-MS strategy was then used in a direct comparison with nano-LC-MS for the detection of phosphopeptides. The comparison showed significantly improved phosphopeptide sensitivity in equal sample load and equal sample concentration conditions for CE-MS while providing complementary data to LC-MS, demonstrating the potential of ultra-low flow ESI for the analysis of phosphopeptides in liquid based separation techniques.


Analytical Chemistry | 2014

Full Antibody Primary Structure and Microvariant Characterization in a Single Injection Using Transient Isotachophoresis and Sheathless Capillary Electrophoresis–Tandem Mass Spectrometry

Rabah Gahoual; Jean-Marc Busnel; Alain Beck; Yannis-Nicolas François; Emmanuelle Leize-Wagner

Here we report the complete characterization of the primary structure of a multimeric glycoprotein in a single analysis by capillary electrophoresis (CE) coupled to mass spectrometry (MS). CE was coupled to electrospray ionization tandem MS by means of a sheathless interface. Transient isotachophoresis (t-ITP) was introduced in this work as an electrokinetically based preconcentration technique, allowing injection of up to 25% of the total capillary volume. Characterization was based on an adapted bottom-up proteomic strategy. Using trypsin as the sole proteolytic enzyme and data from a single injection per considered protein, 100% of the amino acid sequences of four different monoclonal antibodies could be achieved. Furthermore, illustrating the effectiveness and overall capabilities of the technique, the results were possible through identification of peptides without tryptic miscleavages or posttranslational modifications, demonstrating the potency of the technique. In addition to full sequence coverages, posttranslational modifications (PTMs) were simultaneously identified, further demonstrating the capacity of this strategy to structurally characterize glycosylations as well as faint modifications such as asparagine deamidation or aspartic acid isomerization. Together with the exquisite detection sensitivity observed, the contributions of both the CE separation mechanism and selectivity were essential to the result of the characterization with regard to that achieved with conventional MS strategies. The quality of the results indicates that recent improvements in interfacing CE-MS coupling, leading to a considerably improved sensitivity, allows characterization of the primary structure of proteins in a robust and faster manner. Taken together, these results open new research avenues for characterization of proteins through MS.


Electrophoresis | 2008

Electrokinetic supercharging for highly efficient peptide preconcentration in capillary zone electrophoresis

Jean-Marc Busnel; Niels Lion; Hubert H. Girault

Electrokinetic supercharging has been integrated in CZE for the development of a highly sensitive methodology for protein tryptic digest analysis. A careful choice of the experimental conditions led to sensitivity enhancement factors between 1000 and 10 000 whilst maintaining a satisfactory resolution. Peptides in the low nanomolar concentration range have been detected despite the use of the poorly sensitive UV absorbance detection mode. The buffer system used in this study is fully suitable for coupling CE to MS.


Analytical Chemistry | 2008

Magnetic Beads Based Immunoaffinity Capillary Electrophoresis of Total Serum IgE with Laser-Induced Fluorescence Detection

Hong-Xu Chen; Jean-Marc Busnel; Gabriel Peltre; Xin-Xiang Zhang; Hubert H. Girault

A magnetic beads based immunoaffinity capillary electrophoresis method for total Immunoglobulin E quantification in serum has been developed. The method combines speed, automation ability, and minimal sample consumption. Only 1 microL of serum is required while the whole immunoaffinity capillary electrophoresis method is performed in less than 50 min. The concomitant use of online immunocapture, transient isotachophoresis, and laser-induced fluorescence detection provides a sensitivity in the low picomolar range and a highly linear fluorescence response over 4 orders of magnitude (IgE concentration ranging from 2.4 to 2400 ng/mL). After validation with a reference material, the method has been successfully applied to the quantification of total IgEs in patient sera. The results compared well with classical ImmunoCap data.


Analytical Chemistry | 2009

Soft Stylus Probes for Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy

Fernando Cortés-Salazar; Markus Träuble; Fei Li; Jean-Marc Busnel; Anne-Laure Gassner; Mohamad Hojeij; Gunther Wittstock; Hubert H. Girault

A soft stylus microelectrode probe has been developed to carry out scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) of rough, tilted, and large substrates in contact mode. It is fabricated by first ablating a microchannel in a polyethylene terephthalate thin film and filling it with a conductive carbon ink. After curing the carbon track and lamination with a polymer film, the V-shaped stylus was cut thereby forming a probe, with the cross section of the carbon track at the tip being exposed either by UV-photoablation machining or by blade cutting followed by polishing to produce a crescent moon-shaped carbon microelectrode. The probe properties have been assessed by cyclic voltammetry, approach curves, and line scans over electrochemically active and inactive substrates of different roughness. The influence of probe bending on contact mode imaging was then characterized using simple patterns. Boundary element method simulations were employed to rationalize the distance-dependent electrochemical response of the soft stylus probes.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2009

Kinetics of Proteolytic Reactions in Nanoporous Materials

Hongyan Bi; Liang Qiao; Jean-Marc Busnel; Baohong Liu; Hubert H. Girault

Proteolysis with proteases preloaded within nanopores of porous material is a very fast process, where proteins can be digested in minutes compared to the conventional bulk enzyme reactions taking place over hours. To model this surprising phenomenon, a modified sequential proteolytic mechanism has been developed to simulate the kinetics of the reaction. Digestion of myoglobin was used as an example to show the high efficiency of the in-nanopore enzymatic reaction, while angiotensin 1 and ACTH (1-14) were selected as model peptides to validate the theoretical considerations. The proteolytic peptides were quantified by capillary electrophoresis and sequenced by mass spectrometry using bottom-up strategy. The simulation clearly shows that the major factor for the very fast digestion kinetics observed stems from a peptide confinement effect, where the generated peptides are trapped within a confined space for further proteolysis to the final products. On the other hand, the ingress and diffusion of the proteins into the porous cavity can accelerate or limit the first proteolytic step requiring the encounter between the substrates and enzymes. The present model can be widely applied to different enzyme catalyzed reactions for high-throughput protein profiling, and can promote the study of enzyme reactions occurring inside the cell.


Electrophoresis | 2008

Capillary electrophoresis immunoassay using magnetic beads

Hong-Xu Chen; Jean-Marc Busnel; Anne-Laure Gassner; Gabriel Peltre; Xin-Xiang Zhang; Hubert H. Girault

Protein A‐coated magnetic beads (0.3 μm) have been trapped in a small portion of a neutrally coated capillary (50 μm id). Anti‐β‐lactoglobulin (β‐LG) antibodies have then been immobilized on the beads through strong affinity with protein A to subsequently capture β‐LG from model or real samples. Once the immunocomplexes formed at physiological pH, a discontinuous buffer system has been used to release the partners and preconcentrate them by transient ITP. The antigens and antibodies have finally been separated by CZE and detected by UV absorbance. An LOQ of 55 nM has been achieved. This methodology has been applied to quantify native β‐LG in pasteurized and ultra‐high‐temperature‐treated bovine milk. All the described procedures, including immunosorbent preparation, sample extraction, cleanup, preconcentration, and separation are completely automated on a commercial CE instrument. As this CE immunoassay method is simple, rapid, selective, and sensitive, it should be a practical and attractive technology for the analysis of complicated biological samples.


Analytical Chemistry | 2009

Iontophoretic Fraction Collection for Coupling Capillary Zone Electrophoresis with Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization Mass Spectrometry

Jean-Marc Busnel; Jacques Josserand; Niels Lion; Hubert H. Girault

An automated fraction collection interface has been developed for coupling capillary electrophoresis (CE) with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI MS). This fraction collection approach is based on electromigration and diffusion and does not rely on the presence of a liquid junction, sheath-liquid, electro-osmotic flow, or a superimposed hydrodynamic flow. Neutrally coated capillary with negligible electro-osmosis can thus be used to provide high-efficiency separations of biological compounds. The in-capillary separation resolution is totally independent from the spotting process. CE-separated species can be collected either in a multiwell plate or directly on a MALDI target. In the present work, an eight-protein mixture, submitted to trypsin proteolysis, has been used as a sample test and separations have been conducted in 50 microm i.d. neutrally coated capillaries. As compared to direct MALDI MS analysis, the integration of CE improved the number of detected peptides from 36 to 87 and the average sequence coverage from 24% to 38%. Internal calibration was used, and an average mass accuracy of 16.1 ppm is reported. Finally, diffusion-migration numerical simulations of the iontophoretic fraction collection process have been carried out.

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Hubert H. Girault

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Gabriel Peltre

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marie-Claire Hennion

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Anne-Laure Gassner

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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André M. Deelder

Leiden University Medical Center

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Oleg A. Mayboroda

Leiden University Medical Center

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Hongyan Bi

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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