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Bruker Introduces amaZon speed™ Next-Generation Ion Trap Mass Spectrometers at HUPO and JAIMA

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At the HUPO 10th Annual World Congress in Geneva, Switzerland (www.hupo2011.com), and at the JAIMA Conference in Tokyo, Japan (www.jaimasis.jp), Bruker this week announces the release of its new high-performance amaZon speed and amaZon speed ETD ion trap mass spectrometers (ITMS) to meet the increasing demands of the proteomics, research and applied markets.

Significant further improvements to the proven amaZon platform now deliver unsurpassed ion trap performance.

Asthe world's fastest ion trap, theamaZon speed offers also the highest ion trap mass accuracy and mass resolution. All amaZon speedscan modes offer significantly improved resolution: the fast XtremeScan (52,000 u/sec) now features mass resolution better than 0.5u for resolving doubly charged ions.

The Maximum Resolution Mode (5,200 u/sec) enables mass resolution well below 0.1u and can resolve 8+ multiply charged ions in full scans across the widest ITMS mass range (up to m/z 3,000) on the market. Other major achievements in hardware and software result in an MS/MS duty cycle of 8 Hz.

This highest raw ITMS performance enables unprecedented analytical capabilities for proteomics researchers for both Bottom-up and Top-down strategies. In combination with SMART™ precursor ion isolation and fragmentation, routine, unambiguous identification of ~1,300 proteins is now possible in single amaZon speed LC/MS/MS runs of, for example, 1 g E. coli lysate.

Similar performance has only recently become available on more expensive mass spectrometers. An extremely wide dynamic range for proteomics supports this performance, and in well-defined standard mixtures of proteins, the amaZon speed now covers up to 5 orders of magnitude in concentration levels.

For Top-down applications and post-translational modification (PTM) analysis, the amaZon speed ETD continues the Bruker leadership in ETD/PTR technologies, delivering the most sensitive, robust and reliable setup.

In combination with Bruker's novel proprietary GlycoQuest™ glycan DB search engine, the amazon speed is an ideal instrument to retrieve structures of released glycans in an easy, automated approach, thus offering a solution to one of the most demanding disciplines in proteomics research.

The enhanced performance of the amaZon speed also delivers greatly improved data quality in a wide range of small molecule applications. Quantification of therapeutic drugs is fully enabled by very sensitive and fast LC-MS/MS methods taking less than 5 minutes.

Novel software for automated assignment of structures to fragment ions offers metabolite identification and structure verification by MSn.

The amaZon speed is an extremely robust system and ideal for a multi-user environment, supported by Bruker's unique Compass OpenAccess software, a web-based client server system with push-button solutions for applications including quality control (QC), recombinant protein MW verification, and automatic library searches.

The intuitive workflow-oriented GUI in combination with the flexibility and throughput of the amaZon speed is suitable for routine industrial, clinical, synthesis or teaching laboratories.

"The amaZon speed represents the next generation in ion trap mass spectrometry, offering combinations of speed and performance without compromise," commented Dr. Markus Meyer, Bruker's Ion Trap MS Product Manager.

Dr. Meyer continued, "Building upon our considerable expertise in ion trap technologies, we are introducing a new robust and cost-effective tool for the scientific and analytical community, designed to tackle their ever expanding and more in-depth molecular measurement challenges."