M

Matthias Mann

Novo Nordisk Foundation

ORCID: 0000-0003-1292-4799

Publishes on Advanced Proteomics Techniques and Applications, Mass Spectrometry Techniques and Applications, Metabolomics and Mass Spectrometry Studies. 1.4k papers and 302.2k citations.

1.4kPublications
302.2kTotal Citations
#1in Proteomics

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Top publicationsby citations

Mass Spectrometric Sequencing of Proteins from Silver-Stained Polyacrylamide Gels
Andrej Shevchenko, Matthias Wilm, Ole Vorm et al.|Analytical Chemistry|1996
Cited by 9.1k

Proteins from silver-stained gels can be digested enzymatically and the resulting peptide analyzed and sequenced by mass spectrometry. Standard proteins yield the same peptide maps when extracted from Coomassie- and silver-stained gels, as judged by electrospray and MALDI mass spectrometry. The low nanogram range can be reached by the protocols described here, and the method is robust. A silver-stained one-dimensional gel of a fraction from yeast proteins was analyzed by nano-electrospray tandem mass spectrometry. In the sequencing, more than 1000 amino acids were covered, resulting in no evidence of chemical modifications due to the silver staining procedure. Silver staining allows a substantial shortening of sample preparation time and may, therefore, be preferable over Coomassie staining. This work removes a major obstacle to the low-level sequence analysis of proteins separated on polyacrylamide gels.

Electrospray Ionization for Mass Spectrometry of Large Biomolecules
Cited by 7.5k

Electrospray ionization has recently emerged as a powerful technique for producing intact ions in vacuo from large and complex species in solution. To an extent greater than has previously been possible with the more familiar "soft" ionization methods, this technique makes the power and elegance of mass spectrometric analysis applicable to the large and fragile polar molecules that play such vital roles in biological systems. The distinguishing features of electrospray spectra for large molecules are coherent sequences of peaks whose component ions are multiply charged, the ions of each peak differing by one charge from those of adjacent neighbors in the sequence. Spectra have been obtained for biopolymers including oligonucleotides and proteins, the latter having molecular weights up to 130,000, with as yet no evidence of an upper limit.

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