Martin Vollmer
Agilent Technologies
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Publication
Featured researches published by Martin Vollmer.
Expert Review of Proteomics | 2004
Edgar Nägele; Martin Vollmer; Patric Hörth; Cornelia Vad
Today, 2D online or offline liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry is state of the art for the identification of proteins from complex proteome samples in many laboratories. Both 2D liquid chromatography methods use two orthogonal liquid chromatography separation techniques. The most commonly used techniques are strong cation exchange chromatography for the first dimension and reversed phase separation for the second dimension. In order to improve sensitivity the reversed phase separation is usually performed in the nanoflow scale and mass spectrometry is used as the final detection method. The high-performance liquid chromatography techniques complement the 2D-gel techniques supporting their weaknesses. This is especially true for the gel separation of hydrophobic membrane proteins, which play an important role in living cells as well as being important targets for future pharmaceutical drugs.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2003
Edgar Nägele; Martin Vollmer; Patric Hörth
This work demonstrates the development of a method for the analysis of complex proteome samples by two-dimensional nano-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. This approach includes strong cation-exchange, sample enrichment, reversed-phase chromatography and nanospray ion trap mass spectroscopy with data dependent tandem mass spectrometry spectra acquisition, and subsequent database search. The new methodology was first evaluated using standard protein digest samples. Finally, data for the analysis of a total Escherichia coli proteome are provided.
Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2010
Steffen Ehlert; Lukas Trojer; Martin Vollmer; Tom van de Goor; Ulrich Tallarek
We analyzed the chromatographic performance of particle-packed, all-polyimide high-performance liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (HPLC/MS) microchips in terms of their hydraulic permeabilities and separation efficiency under isocratic and gradient elution conditions. The separation channels of the chips (with ca 50 microm x 75 microm trapezoidal cross-section and a length of 43 mm) were slurry packed with either 3.5 or 5 microm spherical porous C18-silica particles. A custom-built holder enveloped the chip during packing to prevent channel deformation and delamination from high pressures. It is shown that the packing conditions significantly impact the packing density of the HPLC/MS chips, which determines their performance in both, isocratic and gradient elution modes. Even with steep solvent gradients, peak shape and chromatographic resolution for the densely packed HPLC/MS chips are much improved. Our data show that the analytical power of the HPLC/MS chip is limited by the quality of the chromatographic separation.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2009
Martin Vollmer; Tom van de Goor
HPLC-chip/MS is a novel nanoflow analytical technology conducted on a microfabricated chip that allows for highly efficient HPLC separation and superior sensitive MS detection of complex proteomic mixtures. This is possible through on-chip preconcentration and separation with fluidic connection made automatically in a leak-tight fashion. Minimum precolumn and postcolumn peak dispersion and uncompromised ease of use result in compounds eluting in bands of only a few nanoliters. The chip is fabricated out of bio-inert polyimide-containing channels and integrated chip structures, such as an electrospray emitter, columns, and frits manufactured by laser ablation technology. Meanwhile, a variety of HPLC-chips differing in design and stationary phase are commercially available, which provide a comprehensive solution for applications in proteomics, glycomics, biomarker, and pharmaceutical discovery. The HPLC-chip can also be easily integrated into a multidimensional separation workflow where different orthogonal separation techniques are combined to solve a highly complex separation problems. In this chapter, we describe in detail the methodological chip usage and functionality and its application in the elucidation of the protein profile of human nucleoli.
Electrophoresis | 2010
Christian Wenz; Martina Marchetti-Deschmann; Ela Herwig; Evita Schröttner; Günter Allmaier; Lukas Trojer; Martin Vollmer; Andreas Rüfer
A novel pre‐chip fluorescent derivatization method is presented for protein sizing and quantification by microchip CGE. The derivatization reaction employed a water‐soluble and stable fluorescent dye and was performed under conditions that favored the formation of homogeneous reaction products. The method delivered in terms of protein sizing similar results as microchip CGE with on‐chip staining but showed an extended linear dynamic range for protein quantification encompassing four orders of magnitude. The sensitivity of the method was similar to standard silver‐stained planar gels. The characterization of derivatization reaction products by MS and preparative isoelectric focusing indicated that a constant degree of dye molecule tagging was obtained over a broad range of protein/dye ratios. The method allowed detecting and quantifying an impurity spiked into an antibody preparation down to a level of 0.05%. Advantages of this method compared with CGE approaches with pre‐column derivatization include a shorter analysis time and an increased robustness and ease of use.
Analytical Chemistry | 2004
Martin Vollmer; Patric Hörth; Edgar Nägele
Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2005
Anabel S. Fandiño; Isam Rais; Martin Vollmer; Helmuth Elgass; Hermann Schägger; Michael Karas
Journal of Separation Science | 2006
Martin Vollmer; Patric Hörth; Gerard Rozing; Yohann Couté; Rudi Grimm; Denis F. Hochstrasser; Jean-Charles Sanchez
Journal of biomolecular techniques | 2004
Edgar Nägele; Martin Vollmer; Patric Hörth
Journal of Separation Science | 2007
An Staes; Evy Timmerman; Jozef Van Damme; Kenny Helsens; Joël Vandekerckhove; Martin Vollmer; Kris Gevaert