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Dive into the research topics where Ruwan T. Kurulugama is active.

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Featured researches published by Ruwan T. Kurulugama.


Expert Review of Proteomics | 2005

Developing liquid chromatography ion mobility mass spectometry techniques.

Stephen J. Valentine; Xiaoyun Liu; Manolo D. Plasencia; Amy E Hilderbrand; Ruwan T. Kurulugama; Stormy L. Koeniger; David E. Clemmer

When a packet of ions in a buffer gas is exposed to a weak electric field, the ions will separate according to differences in their mobilities through the gas. This separation forms the basis of the analytical method known as ion mobility spectroscopy and is highly efficient, in that it can be carried out in a very short time frame (micro- to milliseconds). Recently, efforts have been made to couple the approach with liquid-phase separations and mass spectrometry in order to create a high-throughput and high-coverage approach for analyzing complex mixtures. This article reviews recent work to develop this approach for proteomics analyses. The instrumentation is described briefly. Several multidimensional data sets obtained upon analyzing complex mixtures are shown in order to illustrate the approach as well as provide a view of the limitations and required future work.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2009

Overtone Mobility Spectrometry (Part 1): Experimental Observations

Ruwan T. Kurulugama; Fabiane M. Nachtigall; Sunyoung Lee; Stephen J. Valentine; David E. Clemmer

A new method that allows a linear drift tube to be operated as a continuous ion mobility filter is described. Unlike conventional ion mobility instruments that use an electrostatic gate to introduce a packet of ions into a drift region, the present approach uses multiple segmented drift regions with modulated drift fields to produce conditions that allow only ions with appropriate mobilities to pass through the instrument. In this way, the instrument acts as a mobility filter for continuous ion sources. By changing the frequency of the applied drift fields it is possible to tune this instrument to transmit ions having different mobilities. A scan over a wide range of drift field frequencies for a single ion species shows a peak corresponding to the expected resonance time of the ions in one drift region segment and a series of peaks at higher frequencies that are overtones of the resonant frequency. The measured resolving power increases for higher overtones, making it possible to resolve structures that were unresolved in the region of the fundamental frequency. We demonstrate the approach by examining oligosaccharide isomers, raffinose and melezitose as well as a mixture of peptides obtained from enzymatic digestion of myoglobin.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2012

Delineating Diseases by IMS-MS Profiling of Serum N-linked Glycans

Dragan Isailovic; Manolo D. Plasencia; M. M. Gaye; Sarah T. Stokes; Ruwan T. Kurulugama; Vitara Pungpapong; Min Zhang; Zuzana Kyselova; Radoslav Goldman; Yehia Mechref; Milos V. Novotny; David E. Clemmer

Altered branching and aberrant expression of N-linked glycans is known to be associated with disease states such as cancer. However, the complexity of determining such variations hinders the development of specific glycomic approaches for assessing disease states. Here, we examine a combination of ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) and mass spectrometry (MS) measurements, with principal component analysis (PCA) for characterizing serum N-linked glycans from 81 individuals: 28 with cirrhosis of the liver, 25 with liver cancer, and 28 apparently healthy. Supervised PCA of combined ion-mobility profiles for several, to as many as 10 different mass-to-charge ratios for glycan ions, improves the delineation of diseased states. This extends an earlier study [J. Proteome Res.2008, 7, 1109-1117] of isomers associated with a single glycan (S(1)H(5)N(4)) in which PCA analysis of the IMS profiles appeared to differentiate the liver cancer group from the other samples. Although performed on a limited number of test subjects, the combination of IMS-MS for different combinations of ions and multivariate PCA analysis shows promise for characterizing disease states.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2009

Overtone mobility spectrometry: Part 2. Theoretical considerations of resolving power

Stephen J. Valentine; Sarah T. Stokes; Ruwan T. Kurulugama; Fabiane M. Nachtigall; David E. Clemmer

The transport of ions through multiple drift regions is modeled to develop an equation that is useful for an understanding of the resolving power of an overtone mobility spectrometry (OMS) technique. It is found that resolving power is influenced by a number of experimental variables, including those that define ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) resolving power: drift field (E), drift region length (L), and buffer gas temperature (T). However, unlike IMS, the resolving power of OMS is also influenced by the number of drift regions (n), harmonic frequency value (m), and the phase number (Φ) of the applied drift field. The OMS resolving power dependence upon the new OMS variables (n, m, and Φ) scales differently than the square root dependence of the E, L, and T variables in IMS. The results provide insight about optimal instrumental design and operation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Determination of cross sections by overtone mobility spectrometry: evidence for loss of unstable structures at higher overtones.

Sunyoung Lee; Michael A. Ewing; Fabiane M. Nachtigall; Ruwan T. Kurulugama; Stephen J. Valentine; David E. Clemmer

Overtone mobility spectrometry (OMS) is examined as a means of determining the collision cross sections for multiply charged ubiquitin and substance P ions, as well as for singly charged rafinose and melezitose ions. Overall, values of collision cross section measured by OMS for stable ion conformations are found to be in agreement with values determined by conventional ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) measurements to within ∼1% relative uncertainty. The OMS spectra for ubiquitin ions appear to favor different conformations at higher overtones. We propose that the changes in the distributions as a function of the overtone region in which they are measured arise from the elimination of ions that undergo structural transitions in the drift regions. Kinetics simulations suggest that structural transitions occurring on the order of a few ms and resulting in an ∼4% change in ion collision cross sections are detected by OMS measurements. The unique method of distinguishing ion mobilities with OMS reveals these structural transitions which are not readily apparent from traditional IMS measurements.


Analytical Chemistry | 2017

An Interlaboratory Evaluation of Drift Tube Ion Mobility–Mass Spectrometry Collision Cross Section Measurements

Sarah M. Stow; Tim J. Causon; Xueyun Zheng; Ruwan T. Kurulugama; Teresa Mairinger; Jody C. May; Emma E. Rennie; Erin S. Baker; Richard D. Smith; John A. McLean; Stephan Hann; John C. Fjeldsted

Collision cross section (CCS) measurements resulting from ion mobility-mass spectrometry (IM-MS) experiments provide a promising orthogonal dimension of structural information in MS-based analytical separations. As with any molecular identifier, interlaboratory standardization must precede broad range integration into analytical workflows. In this study, we present a reference drift tube ion mobility mass spectrometer (DTIM-MS) where improvements on the measurement accuracy of experimental parameters influencing IM separations provide standardized drift tube, nitrogen CCS values (DTCCSN2) for over 120 unique ion species with the lowest measurement uncertainty to date. The reproducibility of these DTCCSN2 values are evaluated across three additional laboratories on a commercially available DTIM-MS instrument. The traditional stepped field CCS method performs with a relative standard deviation (RSD) of 0.29% for all ion species across the three additional laboratories. The calibrated single field CCS method, which is compatible with a wide range of chromatographic inlet systems, performs with an average, absolute bias of 0.54% to the standardized stepped field DTCCSN2 values on the reference system. The low RSD and biases observed in this interlaboratory study illustrate the potential of DTIM-MS for providing a molecular identifier for a broad range of discovery based analyses.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2011

Overtone mobility spectrometry: part 3. On the origin of peaks.

Stephen J. Valentine; Ruwan T. Kurulugama; David E. Clemmer

The origin of non-integer overtone peaks in overtone mobility spectrometry (OMS) spectra is investigated by ion trajectory simulations. Simulations indicate that these OMS features arise from higher-order overtone series. An empirically-derived formula is presented as a means of describing the positions of peaks. The new equation makes it possible to determine collision cross sections from any OMS peak. Additionally, it is extended as a means of predicting the resolving power for any peak in an OMS distribution.


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2011

Overtone Mobility Spectrometry: Part 4. OMS-OMS Analyses of Complex Mixtures

Ruwan T. Kurulugama; Fabiane M. Nachtigall; Stephen J. Valentine; David E. Clemmer

A new, two-dimensional overtone mobility spectrometry (OMS-OMS) instrument is described for the analysis of complex peptide mixtures. OMS separations are based on the differences in mobilities of ions in the gas phase. The method utilizes multiple drift regions with modulated drift fields such that only ions with appropriate mobilities are transmitted to the detector. Here we describe a hybrid OMS-OMS combination that utilizes two independently operated OMS regions that are separated by an ion activation region. Mobility-selected ions from the first OMS region are exposed to energizing collisions and may undergo structural transitions before entering the second OMS region. This method generates additional peak capacity and allows for higher selectivity compared with the one-dimensional OMS method. We demonstrate the approach using a three-protein tryptic digest spiked with the peptide Substance P. The [M + 3H]3+ ion from Substance P can be completely isolated from other components in this complex mixture prior to introduction into the mass spectrometer.


Archive | 2011

New Developments in LC-MS and Other Hyphenated Techniques

Mikhail E. Belov; Ruwan T. Kurulugama; Daniel Lopez-Ferrer; Yehia M. Ibrahim; Erin S. Baker

Extensive challenges faced by analytical chemists in studying real world complex samples such as biological body fluids, tissue samples, environmental and geological samples have led to the exponential growth in analytical techniques in the late twentieth century. This vast array of different analytical techniques can be categorized into two major areas: sample separation and mass spectrometry analysis. Current state-of-the-art sample separation methods include gas chromatography, high performance liquid chromatography, ultra high pressure liquid chromatography, solid phase extraction, capillary electrophoresis, capillary zone electrophoresis and gas phase separation techniques such as ion mobility spectrometry. The current trend in sample separation is to combine multiple techniques that utilize different separation mechanisms to maximize the separation. The most widely used combinations include two-dimensional gas chromatography, strong cation exchange or weak cation exchange chromatography followed by reversed-phase liquid chromatography, two-dimensional reversed-phase liquid chromatography, liquid chromatography followed by ion mobility spectrometry and two-dimensional electrophoresis techniques. The introduction of atmospheric pressure ionization techniques such as electrospray ionization and matrix assisted laser desorption ionization and the variations of these two techniques have exponentially increased the utility of mass spectrometry in complex sample analysis. Mass spectrometry itself has tremendously improved over the years in terms of sensitivity, detection limits and dynamic range capabilities. Currently, mass spectrometers can attain zeptomolar detection limits with five orders of magnitude dynamic range.


Analytical Chemistry | 2005

Scanning electrochemical microscopy of model neurons: constant distance imaging.

Ruwan T. Kurulugama; David O. Wipf; Sara A. Takacs; Sirinun Pongmayteegul; Paul A. Garris; John E. Baur

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David E. Clemmer

Indiana University Bloomington

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Erin S. Baker

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Manolo D. Plasencia

Indiana University Bloomington

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Stormy L. Koeniger

Indiana University Bloomington

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Daniel Lopez-Ferrer

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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