教授德國杜伊斯堡-埃森大學(xué)
報(bào)告題目:Development of a New Ionization Source for Single Cell metabolome Analysis
報(bào)告摘要
Although the unrevealing of cellular heterogeneity is limiting for the understanding of complex processes in cancer research as e.g. its influence on the process of metastasising, current research still depends on bulk analysis technologies as no reliable method could be established for real single cell metabolome analysis yet.
The necessary analytical requirements that such a method for single cell metabolome analysis needs in terms of detection limit, sample amount and specificity will be discussed in detail in this presentation. Also, still unsolved problems will be addressed and put up for discussion.
Subsequently, our current work on an ion source, which should be able to destroy the cell and thus release the analytes and ionize them by means of Dielectric Barrier Discharge, will be presented. The current status of developments from the literature and from us will be briefly presented in this talk.
個(gè)人簡介
In 2009 Oliver J. Schmitz got a full professor in Analytical Chemistry at the University of Wuppertal (BUW). Between 2010 and 2012 he was the chair of the Analytical Chemistry department at BUW. Since 2013, Schmitz has been a full professor at the University of Duisburg-Essen and heads the Institute for Applied Analytical Chemistry.
2009 he cofounded the company iGenTraX UG which develops new ion sources and units to couple separation techniques with mass spectrometers. In 2011 he was one of the founding directorsof the Interdisciplinary Centre for Pure and Applied Mass Spectrometry, University of Wuppertal. Since 2013, Schmitz is also one of the chairmen of the analytica conferences in China and Vietnam and in 2018, together with Agilent Technologies, he founded the Teaching and Research Center for Separation (TRC).
The research fields of Prof. Schmitz are the development of ion sources, use and optimization of multi-dimensional LC and GC, ion mobility-mass spectrometry and coupling analytical techniques with mass spectrometers. Furthermore, he is working about origin of life and metabolomics. Prof. Schmitz was awarded the scholar-in-training award of the American Association for Cancer Research in 2003, the Gerhard-Hesse Prize for chromatography in 2013 and in the same year the Fresenius Lecturer. 2018 he was awarded with the Waksmundzki Medal Award for Analytical Chemistry of the Polish Academy of Sciences.