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Welcome
Both these meetings welcomed academic and industrial scientists from around the world representing disciplines as diverse as analytical, preparative, and native mass spectrometry, molecular electron microscopy, tomography and scanning probe microscopy. The conference acronym, MS+M, stands for Mass Spectrometry plus Microscopy, expressing the vision that this sum is greater than its parts.
We are happy to announce that the third meeting will be held in October 2025 in Utrecht, and hosted by Albert Heck (Utrecht), Kyle Fort (ThermoFisher), Kelvin Anggara (MPI Stuttgart) and Joost Snijder (Utrecht). We aim to further strengthen collaboration and science in this emerging, exciting community and invite you all to contribute. Please express your interest in the meeting ASAP, as the attendance is limited to ~160 participants.
Save the date: October 1st to 3rd 2025.
Organizing Committee

Albert Heck is a distinguished Professor at Utrecht University, specializing in mass spectrometry and proteomics. He leads the Biomolecular Mass Spectrometry & Proteomics group and serves as scientific director of the Netherlands Proteomics Center. His innovative research has earned him numerous accolades, including the Spinoza Prize in 2017.

Kyle L. Fort is a Research and Development Scientist at Thermo Fisher Scientific in Bremen, Germany, specializing in mass spectrometry and instrument development. He earned his Ph.D. in Chemistry from Texas A&M University in 2014. In 2023, he was appointed Affiliated Assistant Professor at Utrecht University.

Kelvin Anggara is a Senior Scientist and ERC Group Leader at the Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research in Stuttgart, Germany, specializing in single-molecule chemistry. He earned his Ph.D. in Chemistry from the University of Toronto in 2018. His research focuses on developing methods to visualize glycans at the single-molecule level.

Joost Snijder is an Assistant Professor at Utrecht University, specializing in structural proteomics to study virus-host interactions. His research combines mass spectrometry and cryo-electron microscopy to understand antibody neutralization of viral infections. In 2018, he received the Heineken Young Scientist Award in Medical/Biomedical Sciences.
Invited Speakers

University of Oxford, develops optical methods to visualize single biomolecules, advancing biophysical chemistry.

Utrecht University, specializes in structural cell biology of mammalian gametes.

Purdue University, Henry B. Hass Distinguished Professor, specializes in mass spectrometry innovation.

University of Sheffield, develops atomic force microscopy and image analysis tools to study DNA structural heterogeneity and function.

UCLA, specializes in mass spectrometry for protein characterization and proteomics research.

University of Wisconsin–Madison, develops mass spectrometry techniques for proteomics and structural biology research.

Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, integrates mass spectrometry, ion mobility, and photoactivation methods to explore the structural dynamics of protein aggregation.

Thermo Fisher Scientific, developed the Orbitrap mass analyzer, revolutionizing high-resolution mass spectrometry.

Maastricht University, develops mass spectrometry and electron microscopy methods for structural biology.

Palacky University Olomouc, develops STM/AFM techniques for high-resolution imaging and characterization of single molecules and π-conjugated polymers.

University of Oxford, is an Associate Professor of Physical Chemistry, leading research in electrospray ion beam deposition and single-molecule imaging.

Paris-Saclay University, CNRS researcher where she focuses on the development of MS and ion mobility approaches for protein and nucleic acids characterization.

Bruker Chief scientific officer of Biosensors and professor for physical chemistry at TU Dresden. His research revolves around the analysis of molecular interactions, including methods to probe single cells and single molecules.

Michael Barber Centre for Collaborative Mass Spectrometry, director. Her research focuses on IMS and mass spectrometry and the search for biomarkers for Parkinson’s disease.


Director of R&D at Fasmatech Science & Technology, a Bruker company. He is the inventor of the Omnitrap platform, and a leading expert in mass spectrometry instrumentation design and development.

University of Manchester is an expert in scanning probe microscopy, and explores dielectric polarization on the atomic scale, particularly of molecular systems under confinement..

Morgridge Institute for Research, Assistant Professor of Biochemistry at UW-Madison. He develops and applies cryo-EM methods to study molecular structure and function.

EMBL Hamburg, Structural biologist and methods developer interested in structural characterization of protein-protein interactions using MX, cryo-EM, and AI. Contributor to CCP4 and CCP-EM.

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