Princeton University Selects Thermo Scientifics Orbitrap MS for Proteomics and Genomics Research
Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. today announced that Princeton University is utilizing the newly launched MALDI LTQ Orbitrap XL mass spectrometer for research on virus-host protein interactions in the laboratory of Ileana Cristea, Ph.D.
Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. today announced that Princeton University is utilizing the newly launched MALDI LTQ Orbitrap XL™ mass spectrometer for research on virus-host protein interactions in the laboratory of Ileana Cristea, Ph.D. Dr. Cristea’s work on chromatin and its modulation by viruses promises to further scientists’ understanding about how viruses manipulate their host to their advantage. The laboratory employs a multidisciplinary approach, incorporating methodologies from modern proteomics, biochemistry, molecular biology and virology. The research, while preliminary, holds implications for improved therapies for the treatment of viral infections, from the common cold to HIV.
Because the samples required for the studies are difficult to obtain and the elements of interest are frequently present at very low levels, Dr. Cristea began exploring the benefits of combining MALDI with state-of-the-art mass spectrometry (MS) instrumentation. Interested in novel MS developments, she believed there would be significant benefit with the integration of the Thermo Scientific LTQ Orbitrap with a MALDI interface.
“I am quite impressed that I have in my laboratory the first configuration of its kind in the MALDI LTQ Orbitrap XL,” said Dr. Cristea, Assistant Professor with Princeton University’s Department of Molecular Biology. “Its performance has already proven to be terrific. This instrument combines the robustness and high throughput capabilities of MALDI with the sensitivity of the linear trap and the high mass accuracy and resolution of the Orbitrap. The MALDI LTQ Orbitrap XL is perfectly suited for characterizing protein complexes. After the initial MS and MS/MS analyses and identifications, the samples can be preserved on the MALDI target to pursue new interesting directions revealed by the first analyses.”
Source: Thermo Fisher Scientific