Education
Albert Heck studied chemistry at the VU University in Amsterdam and received his Doctor of Philosophy in 1993 at the University of Amsterdam.
Albert Heck studied chemistry at the VU University in Amsterdam and received his Doctor of Philosophy in 1993 at the University of Amsterdam.
After a postdoctoral period at Stanford University in the lab of Richard Zare and Sandia National Laboratories (Livermore) he became a postdoctoral fellow and later lecturer at University of Warwick. In 1998 he accepted a chair at Utrecht University as head of the Biomolecular Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics Group. His group is part of the Departments of Chemistry and Pharmaceutical Sciences of the Faculty of Science.
Since 2003 Heck is scientific director of the Netherlands Proteomics Centre.
From 2006 until 2012 Heck was scientific director of the Bijvoet Center for Biomolecular at the Utrecht University. The research of Albert Heck is focussed on the use of mass spectrometry to study proteins.
Within his research group, the two main lines of research are proteomics and native mass spectrometry of proteins and protein complexes. In proteomics, he is most renowned for his work on the analysis of post-translational modification of proteins using mass spectrometry, such as protein phosphorylation and for the development of novel peptide fragmentation strategies to elucidate post-translational modifications.
His group is among the pioneers of native mass spectrometry to study large protein assemblies and has developed and implemented novel technologies to study protein interactions and the formation of tertiary and quaternary protein structures.
Among the complexes that he studied using native mass spectrometry are virus assemblies of up to 18 megadalton and antibodies in complex with other proteins such as their antigens or the complement system.
Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences]
He is a council member of Human Proteome Organization Proteomics Standards Initiative ( Parenting Stress Index) and since 2011 coordinator of PRIME-XS, a European collaboration in the field of proteomics.