Ljiljana Paša-Tolić | |
Workplaces: | Pacific Northwest National Laboratory National High Magnetic Field Laboratory |
Alma Mater: | University of Zagreb |
Thesis Year: | 1992 |
Fields: | Mass spectrometry Proteomics Metabolomics |
Ljiljana Paša-Tolić is a Croatian research scientist who is a research fellow in Functional and Systems Biology at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. She is responsible for developing capability in mass spectrometry at the PNNL Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory. Her research looks to develop analytical techniques to modify protein abundance.
Paša-Tolić studied chemistry at the University of Zagreb.[1] She remained in Zagreb for graduate research, specializing in physical organic chemistry.
She moved to the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory as a visiting researcher, where she developed a fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance spectrometer to study biopolymers. She moved to the PNNL as a postdoctoral fellow in 1995.Paša-Tolić is an expert in mass spectrometry and the development of analytical methods to understand molecular processes. She developed sophisticated modalities of mass spectrometry to investigate the polymerases found in plants. Her research showed that the polymerases found in Arabidopsis are actually derivatives of a polymerase found in eukaryotes.[2]
Paša-Tolić was included in the 2021 Analytical Sciences Power List.[3]
Her publications include: