Markus Hartl Advancing proteomics step-by-step

On January 23, 2025, the institute seminar will take place:

January 23, 2025 / 12:00 / HS2
Markus Hartl 
Max Perutz Labs Vienna

“Advancing proteomics step-by-step”

Dr. Markus Hartl is a biologist specialized on LC-MS based proteomics and currently the head of the Mass Spectrometry Facility at Max Perutz Labs, Vienna.

Driven by a keen interest in all living things he studied Ecology and Ecological Biochemistry at the University of Vienna, followed by a PhD thesis at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology in Jena, Germany, where he discovered his passion for proteins and proteomics. As a postdoc he joined the lab of Dr. Iris Finkemeier at the LMU Munich, where he optimized the methodology for deep quantitative acetylome profiling in collaboration with the lab of Dr. Matthias Mann. 

In 2014, he was appointed as head of the Max Perutz Labs Mass Spectrometry Facility. He and his team provide comprehensive proteomics services to both internal research groups at the Perutz and external clients, including academic institutions and companies in Vienna and beyond. His research centers on optimizing proteomics workflows and on developing innovative methods to address complex biological challenges. Additionally, he is a member of the FWF SFB F70 project, focused on “HDACs as regulators of T cell-mediated immunity in health and disease”, where he contributes to advancing our understanding of the intricate regulation of T-cell mediated immunity and how it can be modulated through HDAC activity.

Boryana Petrova “Leveraging Metabolomics to Charakterize Embryonic CSF During Inflammation”

On January 16, 2025, the institute seminar will take place:

January 16, 2025 / 12:00 / HS2
Boryana Petrova
Medical University of Vienna
“Leveraging Metabolomics to Characterize Embryonic CSF During Inflammation”

Dr. Petrova is a broadly trained molecular biologist with extensive expertise in LCMS and metabolomics. Her dedication has enabled her to thrive as a metabolomics expert at prestigious institutions such as MIT and Harvard Medical School (HMS). As a postdoc at MIT, research on Drosophila oogenesis and Toxoplasma gondii drug resistance sparked her interest in metabolomics and LCMS. At Boston Children’s Hospital and HMS, as a staff scientist, she established the metabolomics mass spectrometry facility for the lab of Dr. N. Kanarek, overseeing daily operations and personnel, method development, and data analysis. Her extensive collaborations and independent research have applied metabolomics to various biological inquiries, including cancer, neuroinflammation, developmental biology and more, both in basic and clinically relevant settings. As an instructor at HMS, Dr. Petrova further focused on mentoring colleagues and students and has developed graduate-level courses on cancer metabolism and LCMS. Her commitment to teaching is further demonstrated by her roles as a lecturer at Northeastern University and the Cambridge Centre for International Research. Dr. Petrova has recently assumed the position of Director of the Research Metabolomics Core Facility at Medical University of Vienna. In this role, she aims to drive innovation in metabolomics, support collaborative research efforts, and pursue independent research initiatives.