EXPANDING THE FRONTIERS OF MASS SPECTROMETRY TECHNOLOGY
Shimadzu Biotech establish research lab for Nobel Prize Winner
24th July 2003. In honour of his receipt of The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2002 for the discovery of Soft Laser Desorption of macromolecules, Shimadzu Corporation (Kyoto, Japan), the founder of Shimadzu Biotech, has established the Koichi Tanaka Mass Spectrometry Research Laboratory in Kyoto, Japan.
Through industrial and academic partnerships, this new laboratory, headed by Koichi Tanaka himself, aims to enhance and develop new platforms for mass spectrometry (MS). Such new and innovative MS technological developments would then be commercialised by Shimadzu Biotech.
A further goal of the new laboratory is to develop completely new applications that will enable the introduction of MALDI-MS to new scientific fields and markets. This revolutionary MS technique is very suitable for use by non-specialists for example, since it is user friendly, whilst offering higher sensitivity and throughput than any other analytical systems on the market today.
Mr Tanaka commented, “To achieve these goals, we would like to collaborate with the leading experts in a wide range of technologies. To do this, we expect to deepen communications and instigate partnerships with researchers from key institutions worldwide. This will pave the way for realising the potential for completely new mass spectrometry platforms.”
“The discovery of MALDI-MS has opened up many new areas of research within the fields of proteomics and glycomics for example. We are very excited that the opening of the new laboratory will enable further exploration of the full capabilities of this powerful technique in numerous other fields and markets,” said Dr Ichikawa, Chairman of Shimadzu Biotech.
*Koichi Tanaka, Nobel prize in chemistry 2002 shared with J.B. Fenn (MS) and K. Wüthrich (NMR)