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Dive into the research topics where Mario Ursem is active.

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Featured researches published by Mario Ursem.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2010

High-efficiency liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry separations with 50 mm, 250 mm, and 1 m long polymer-based monolithic capillary columns for the characterization of complex proteolytic digests.

Sebastiaan Eeltink; Sebastiaan Dolman; Frederik Detobel; Remco Swart; Mario Ursem; Peter J. Schoenmakers

In this study, high-efficiency LC-MS/MS separations of complex proteolytic digests are demonstrated using 50 mm, 250 mm, and 1m long poly(styrene-co-divinylbenzene) monolithic capillary columns. The chromatographic performance of the 50 and 250 mm monoliths was compared at the same gradient steepness for gradient durations between 5 and 150 min. The maximum peak capacity of 400 obtained with a 50mm column, increased to 485 when using the 250 mm long column and scaling the gradient duration according column length. With a 5-fold increase in column length only a 20% increase in peak capacity was observed, which could be explained by the larger macropore size of the 250 mm long monolith. When taking into account the total analysis time, including the dwell time, gradient time and column equilibration time, the 50mm long monolith yielded better peptide separations than the 250 mm long monolithic column for gradient times below 80 min (n(c)=370). For more demanding separation the 250 mm long monolith provided the highest peak production rate and consequently higher sequence coverage. For the analysis of a proteolytic digest of Escherichia coli proteins a monolithic capillary column of 1m in length was used, yielding a peak capacity of 1038 when applying a 600 min gradient.


Journal of Chromatography A | 1996

Optimised injection techniques for micro and capillary liquid chromatography

Johannes P.C. Vissers; Arnoud H. de Ru; Mario Ursem; Jean-Pierre Chervet

Abstract Large volume injections —involving on-column focusing— were evaluated for packed micro and capillary liquid chromatography columns of 300 μm and 1.0 mm inner diameter (I.D.) respectively. It was found that the I.D. of the injection loop plays a critical role in sample dispersion, effecting peak asymmetry and injection reproductibility. The use of injection loops with too large or too small an I.D. resulted in a reduced injection performance. Ideally the I.D. should be in between 100–150 μm. Further it was investigated what influence the loop volume and the use of a low dispersion injection technique had on the column stability. The combination of large volume injections—up to 1 μl and 5 μl for 300 μm and 1.0 mm I.D. columns, respectively—and additional switching of the injection valve did not affect column lifetime. Typical decreases of only 10% in efficiency over 1500 injections were found.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2009

Optimizing the peak capacity per unit time in one-dimensional and off-line two-dimensional liquid chromatography for the separation of complex peptide samples.

Sebastiaan Eeltink; Sebastiaan Dolman; Remco Swart; Mario Ursem; Peter J. Schoenmakers

To obtain the best compromise between peak capacity and analysis time in one-dimensional and two-dimensional (2D) liquid chromatography (LC), column technology and operating conditions were optimized. The effects of gradient time, flow rate, column temperature, and column length were investigated in one-dimensional reversed-phase (RP) gradient nano-LC, with the aim of maximizing the peak per unit time for peptide separations. An off-line two-dimensional LC approach was developed using a micro-fractionation option of the autosampler, which allowed automatic fractionation of peptides after a first-dimension ion-exchange separation and re-injection of the fractions onto a second-dimension RP nano-LC column. Under the applied conditions, which included a preconcentration/desalting time of 5 min, and a column equilibration time of 12.5 min, the highest peak capacity per unit time in the 2D-LC mode was obtained when applying a short (10 min) first-dimension gradient and second-dimension RP gradients of 20 min duration. For separations requiring a maximum peak capacity of 375, one-dimensional LC was found to be superior to the off-line strong cation-exchange/x/RPLC approach in terms of analysis time. Although a peak capacity of 450 could be obtained in one-dimensional LC when applying 120-min gradients on 500-mm long columns packed with 3-mum particles, for separations requiring a peak capacity higher than 375 2D-LC experiments provide a higher peak capacity per unit time. Finally, the potential of off-line 2D-LC coupled to tandem mass spectrometry detection is demonstrated with the analysis of a tryptic digest of a mixture of nine proteins and an Escherichia coli digest.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2011

High-resolution separations of protein isoforms with liquid chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry using polymer monolithic capillary columns

Sebastiaan Eeltink; Bert Wouters; Gert Desmet; Mario Ursem; David Blinco; Glenwyn Kemp; Achim Treumann

The separation of intact proteins, including protein isoforms arising from various amino-acid modifications, employing a poly(styrene-co-divinylbenzene) monolithic capillary column in high-performance liquid chromatography coupled on-line to a time-of-flight mass spectrometer (MS) is described. Using a 250 mm × 0.2 mm monolithic capillary column high-sensitivity separations yielding peak capacities of >600 were achieved with a 2h linear gradient and formic acid added in the mobile phase as ion-pairing agent. The combination of high-resolution chromatography with high-accuracy MS allowed to distinguish protein isoforms that differ only in their oxidation and biotinylation state allowing the separation between structural isoforms. Finally, the potential to separate proteins isoforms due to glycosylation is discussed.


Journal of Separation Science | 2009

1 mm ID poly(styrene‐co‐divinylbenzene) monolithic columns for high‐peak capacity one‐ and two‐dimensional liquid chromatographic separations of intact proteins

Sebastiaan Eeltink; Sebastiaan Dolman; Frederik Detobel; Gert Desmet; Remco Swart; Mario Ursem

The LC performance of a 1x50 mm polymer monolithic column format was demonstrated with high-peak capacity one- (1D) and offline two dimensional (2D) LC separations of intact proteins. After optimizing the RP 1D-LC conditions, including column temperature, flow rate and gradient time, a peak capacity of 475 was achieved within a 2-h analysis. The suitability of the monolithic column was also demonstrated for fast 1 min protein separations yielding 1 s peak widths determined at half peak height. In addition, an offline 2D-LC method was developed using the micro-fraction collection capabilities of the autosampler allowing automatic fractionation of intact proteins after the weak-ion-exchange (WAX) separation, and re-injection of the fractions onto the second-dimension RP monolithic column. The best peak capacity-to-analysis time ratio was obtained when applying 10 min second-dimension RP gradients. At optimized conditions, the WAX/x/RPLC separation of intact Escherichia coli proteins was performed within 6 h yielding a maximum theoretical peak capacity of 4880.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2010

Parameters affecting the separation of intact proteins in gradient-elution reversed-phase chromatography using poly(styrene-co-divinylbenzene) monolithic capillary columns

Frederik Detobel; Ken Broeckhoven; Joke Wellens; Bert Wouters; Remco Swart; Mario Ursem; Gert Desmet; Sebastiaan Eeltink

An experimental study was performed to investigate the effects of column parameters and gradient conditions on the separation of intact proteins using styrene-based monolithic columns. The effect of flow rate on peak width was investigated at constant gradient steepness by normalizing the gradient time for the column hold-up time. When operating the column at a temperature of 60 degrees C a small C-term effect was observed in a flow rate range of 1-4 microL/min. However, the C-term effect on peak width is not as strong as the decrease in peak width due to increasing flow rate. The peak capacity increased according to the square root of the column length. Decreasing the macropore size of the polymer monolith while maintaining the column length constant, resulted in an increase in peak capacity. A trade-off between peak capacity and total analysis time was made for 50, 100, and 250 mm long monolithic columns and a microparticulate column packed with 5 microm porous silica particles while operating at a flow rate of 2 microL/min. The peak capacity per unit time of the 50mm long monolithic column with small pore size was superior when the total analysis time is below 120 min, yielding a maximum peak capacity of 380. For more demanding separations the 250 mm long monolith provided the highest peak capacity in the shortest possible time frame.


Analytical Chemistry | 2010

Selection of Column Dimensions and Gradient Conditions to Maximize the Peak-Production Rate in Comprehensive Off-Line Two-Dimensional Liquid Chromatography Using Monolithic Columns

Sebastiaan Eeltink; Sebastiaan Dolman; Gabriel Vivó-Truyols; Peter J. Schoenmakers; Remco Swart; Mario Ursem; Gert Desmet

The peak-production rate (peak capacity per unit time) in comprehensive off-line two-dimensional liquid chromatography (LC/x/LC) was optimized for the separation of peptides using poly(styrene-co-divinylbenzene) monolithic columns in the reversed-phase (RP) mode. A first-dimension ((1)D) separation was performed on a monolithic column operating at a pH of 8, followed by sequential analysis of all the (1)D fractions on a monolithic column operating at a pH of 2. To obtain the highest peak-production rate, effects of column length, gradient duration, and sampling time were examined. RP/x/RP was performed at undersampling conditions using a short 10 min (1)D gradient. The peak-production rate was highest using a 50 mm long (2)D column applying an 8-10 min (2)D gradient time and was almost a factor of two higher than when a 250 mm monolithic column was used. The best way to obtain a higher peak-production rate in off-line LC/x/LC proved to be an increase in the number of (1)D fractions collected. Increasing the (2)D gradient time was less effective. The potential of the optimized RP/x/RP method is demonstrated by analyzing proteomics samples of various complexities. Finally, the trade-off between peak capacity and analysis time is discussed in quantitative terms for both one-dimensional RP gradient-elution chromatography and the off-line two-dimensional (RP/x/RP) approach. At the conditions applied, the RP/x/RP approach provided a higher peak-production rate than the (1)D-LC approach when collecting three (1)D fractions, which corresponds to a total analysis time of 60 min.


Journal of Separation Science | 2010

Use of kinetic plots for the optimization of the separation time in ultra-high-pressure LC

Sebastiaan Eeltink; Wim M. C. Decrop; Frank Steiner; Mario Ursem; Deirdre Cabooter; Gert Desmet; Wim Th. Kok

The kinetic-plot approach, in which experimental t(0) and N-values are extrapolated to the performance at maximum system pressure by increasing the column length, was validated by coupling 250×3 mm columns packed with 3 μm particles. The extra-column volume introduced by coupling columns could be neglected with respect to the peak volumes. Plate numbers of up to 132,000 were experimentally achieved by coupling four columns. The maximum deviation between the experimental and predicted plate numbers was 7% for two coupled columns, and decreasing to 0.1% for four coupled columns. Kinetic plots were used to find the conditions to separate a critical pair, with a preset value for the effective plate number, in the shortest possible time. For high-efficiency separations yielding 100,000 effective plates, the optimum critical-pair retention factor was around 4.5. Kinetic plots are presented to find the optimal column length to obtain the fastest possible 100,000 effective-plate separation, taking into account the effect of mobile-phase viscosity on column pressure, and consequently the optimum column length.


Analytical Chemistry | 2010

Automatic Column Coupling System To Operate Chromatographic Supports Closer To Their Kinetic Performance Limit and To Enhance Method Development

Deirdre Cabooter; Wim M. C. Decrop; Sebastiaan Eeltink; Remco Swart; Mario Ursem; François Lestremau; Gert Desmet

A new hardware solution is proposed that allows one to automatically change the length of a chromatographic bed. The setup is based on the serial coupling of chromatographic columns using two rotor-stator valves (with N positions, N + 1 ports). Despite the use of a prototype setup requiring rather long connection tubing, only 9% loss in efficiency is observed for compounds with a retention factor above 4 compared to the efficiency expected on the basis of the individual column results. It has been demonstrated for a number of isocratic and gradient separations that the system allows one to realize considerable analysis time savings by adapting the total column length to the specific sample requirements and/or to the stage of method development wherein one is working. During method development, a separation on a short column length can first be used to rapidly gain insight into the composition of the sample, leaving fewer runs to be done on a column of maximal length (offering efficiencies that are inaccessible with individual column systems). The ease with which information can be obtained on columns of different lengths can furthermore be exploited for screening purposes to detect coeluting components in a stage wherein they still appear completely unresolved (i.e., have a resolution well below R(s) = 0.5).


Journal of Visual Communication and Image Representation | 2009

Maximizing the peak production rate in off-line comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry detection

Sebastiaan Eeltink; Sarah J. L. Dolman; Mario Ursem; R de Swart; Fraser N McLeod; Pieter J Schoenmakers

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Remco Swart

Thermo Fisher Scientific

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Gert Desmet

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Frederik Detobel

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Bert Wouters

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Deirdre Cabooter

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Joke Wellens

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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