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Dive into the research topics where Wesley D. Robertson is active.

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Featured researches published by Wesley D. Robertson.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Ultrafast extraction of proteins from tissues using desorption by impulsive vibrational excitation.

Marcel Kwiatkowski; Marcus Wurlitzer; Maryam Omidi; Ling Ren; Sebastian Kruber; Refat Nimer; Wesley D. Robertson; Andrea Kristina Horst; R. J. D. Miller; Hartmut Schlüter

A picosecond IR laser (PIRL) can be used to blast proteins out of tissues through desorption by impulsive excitation (DIVE) of intramolecular vibrational states of water molecules in the cell in less than a millisecond. With PIRL-DIVE proteins covering a range of a few kDa up to several MDa are extracted in high quantities compared to conventional approaches. The chemical composition of extracted proteins remains unaltered and even enzymatic activities are maintained.


Journal of Proteomics | 2016

Homogenization of tissues via picosecond-infrared laser (PIRL) ablation: Giving a closer view on the in-vivo composition of protein species as compared to mechanical homogenization

Marcel Kwiatkowski; Marcus Wurlitzer; A. Krutilin; P. Kiani; Refat Nimer; Maryam Omidi; A. Mannaa; T. Bussmann; Kai Bartkowiak; Sebastian Kruber; S. Uschold; Pascal Steffen; J. Lübberstedt; N. Küpker; Hannes Petersen; R. Knecht; Nils-Owe Hansen; A. Zarrine-Afsar; Wesley D. Robertson; R. J. D. Miller; Hartmut Schlüter

Posttranslational modifications and proteolytic processing regulate almost all physiological processes. Dysregulation can potentially result in pathologic protein species causing diseases. Thus, tissue species proteomes of diseased individuals provide diagnostic information. Since the composition of tissue proteomes can rapidly change during tissue homogenization by the action of enzymes released from their compartments, disease specific protein species patterns can vanish. Recently, we described a novel, ultrafast and soft method for cold vaporization of tissue via desorption by impulsive vibrational excitation (DIVE) using a picosecond-infrared-laser (PIRL). Given that DIVE extraction may provide improved access to the original composition of protein species in tissues, we compared the proteome composition of tissue protein homogenates after DIVE homogenization with conventional homogenizations. A higher number of intact protein species was observed in DIVE homogenates. Due to the ultrafast transfer of proteins from tissues via gas phase into frozen condensates of the aerosols, intact protein species were exposed to a lesser extent to enzymatic degradation reactions compared with conventional protein extraction. In addition, total yield of the number of proteins is higher in DIVE homogenates, because they are very homogenous and contain almost no insoluble particles, allowing direct analysis with subsequent analytical methods without the necessity of centrifugation. Biological significance Enzymatic protein modifications during tissue homogenization are responsible for changes of the in-vivo protein species composition. Cold vaporization of tissues by PIRL-DIVE is comparable with taking a snapshot at the time of the laser irradiation of the dynamic changes that occur continuously under in-vivo conditions. At that time point all biomolecules are transferred into an aerosol, which is immediately frozen.


Lasers in Surgery and Medicine | 2016

Comparative study of wound healing in rat skin following incision with a novel picosecond infrared laser (PIRL) and different surgical modalities

Hannes Petersen; Fatemeh Tavakoli; Sebastian Kruber; Adrian Münscher; Alexandra Gliese; Nils-Owe Hansen; S. Uschold; Dennis Eggert; Wesley D. Robertson; Tobias Gosau; Susanne Sehner; Marcel Kwiatkowski; Hartmut Schlüter; Udo Schumacher; R. Knecht; R. J. Dwayne Miller

As a result of wound healing the original tissue is replaced by dysfunctional scar tissue. Reduced tissue damage during surgical procedures beneficially affects the size of the resulting scar and overall healing time. Thus the choice of a particular surgical instrument can have a significant influence on the postoperative wound healing. To overcome these problems of wound healing we applied a novel picosecond infrared laser (PIRL) system to surgical incisions. Previous studies indicated that negligible thermal, acoustic, or ionization stress effects to the surrounding tissue results in a superior wound healing.


Journal of Proteomics | 2016

Protein species as diagnostic markers

Pascal Steffen; Marcel Kwiatkowski; Wesley D. Robertson; Arash Zarrine-Afsar; Diana Deterra; Verena Richter; Hartmut Schlüter

UNLABELLED Many diseases are associated with protein species perturbations. A prominent example of an established diagnostic marker is the glycated protein species of hemoglobin, termed HbA1c. HbA1c concentration is increased in the blood of diabetes mellitus patients due to their poor control of blood glucose levels resulting in an increased non-enzymatic glycosylation of hemoglobin producing HbA1c. This important diagnostic marker is routinely measured in the blood of diabetes patients. As in the case of HbA1c, protein species can mirror pathophysiological events. Shifts in the levels of protein species can be associated with or even be responsible for disease making them well suited as diagnostic markers. However, only a few protein species are currently used as diagnostic markers in routine clinical chemistry laboratories, despite being widely established in clinical proteomics research. This review provides an overview of the biochemical characteristics associated with protein species as well as examples of pathophysiological mechanisms, which cause modifications in the protein species composition, thereby emphasizing the importance of screening for protein markers at the species level. Further, we highlight techniques, which are currently utilized for investigating protein species markers in clinical research. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE The success rate of FDA approved diagnostic protein markers until today is very low compared to the number of published candidate disease markers. It is hypothesized that one important reason is the gene-centric view which is still followed in clinical proteomics: In many investigations proteins are still digested in small peptides thus making it nearly impossible to discriminate between healthy proteins and pathologic proteins causing diseases. Thus this review is focusing on the biochemistry and patho-biochemistry of proteins, is highlighting the need for screening for disease markers on the protein species level and is giving an overview about available techniques.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2015

Note: A simple image processing based fiducial auto-alignment method for sample registration

Wesley D. Robertson; Lucas R. Porto; Candice J. X. Ip; Megan K. T. Nantel; Friedjof Tellkamp; Yinfei Lu; R. J. Dwayne Miller

A simple method for the location and auto-alignment of sample fiducials for sample registration using widely available MATLAB/LabVIEW software is demonstrated. The method is robust, easily implemented, and applicable to a wide variety of experiment types for improved reproducibility and increased setup speed. The software uses image processing to locate and measure the diameter and center point of circular fiducials for distance self-calibration and iterative alignment and can be used with most imaging systems. The method is demonstrated to be fast and reliable in locating and aligning sample fiducials, provided here by a nanofabricated array, with accuracy within the optical resolution of the imaging system. The software was further demonstrated to register, load, and sample the dynamically wetted array.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2018

Digital interference microscopy and density reconstruction of picosecond infrared laser desorption at the water-air interface

Frederik Busse; Sebastian Kruber; Wesley D. Robertson; R. J. Dwayne Miller

Material ablation and evaporation using pulsed infrared lasers pose promising approaches for matrix-free laser desorption ionization and in laser surgery. For the best results, key parameters such as laser wavelength, pulse duration, and pulse energy need to be carefully adjusted to the application. We characterize the dynamics at the water-air interface induced by a 10 ps infrared laser tuned to the water absorption band at 3 μ m, a parameter set facilitating stress confined desorption for typical absorption depths in biological samples and tissue. By driving the ablation faster than nucleation growth, cavitation induced sample damage during the ablation process can be mitigated. The resultant explosive ablation process leads to a shock front expansion and material ejection which we capture using off-axis digital interference microscopy, an interference technique particularly useful for detecting the phase shift caused by transparent objects. It is demonstrated that the method can yield local density...


Analytical Chemistry | 2018

Soft Picosecond Infrared Laser Extraction of Highly Charged Proteins and Peptides from Bulk Liquid Water for Mass Spectrometry

Yinfei Lu; Cornelius Louwrens Pieterse; Wesley D. Robertson; R. J. Dwayne Miller

We report the soft laser extraction and production of highly charged peptide and protein ions for mass spectrometry directly from bulk liquid water at atmospheric pressure and room temperature, using picosecond infrared laser ablation. Stable ion signal from singly charged small molecules, as well as highly charged biomolecular ions, from aqueous solutions at low laser pulse fluence (∼0.3 J cm-2) is demonstrated. Sampling via single picosecond laser pulses is shown to extract less than 27 pL of volume from the sample, producing highly charged peptide and protein ions for mass spectrometry detection. The ablation and ion generation is demonstrated to be soft in nature, producing natively folded proteins ions under sample conditions described for native mass spectrometry. The method provides laser-based sampling flexibility, precision and control with highly charged ion production directly from water at low and near neutral pH. This approach does not require an additional ionization device or high voltage applied directly to the sample.


Pharmaceutical bioprocessing | 2013

Mass spectrometric analysis of protein species of biologics

Verena Richter; Marcel Kwiatkowski; Maryam Omidi; Azam Omidi; Wesley D. Robertson; Hartmut Schlüter


Archive | 2018

Sampling of Tissues with Laser Ablation for bottom-up Proteomics: Comparison of Picosecond Infrared Laser (PIRL) and Microsecond Infrared Laser (MIRL)

A. Krutilin; S. Maier; R. Schuster; Sebastian Kruber; Marcel Kwiatkowski; Wesley D. Robertson; R. J. D. Miller; Hartmut Schlüter


Bioanalysis | 2018

New frontiers in drug development utilizing desorption by impulsive vibrational excitation for sample preparation, tissue imaging and beyond

Wesley D. Robertson; Hartmut Schlüter; R. J. Dwayne Miller; Qin C Ji

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