David Tabb  
Dr. David Tabb
Vanderbilt Univ. Medical Center, U.S.A
E-mail : David.l.tabb@vanderbilt.edu
Web-site :



David Tabb was named one of two White House Presidential Scholars for Missouri in 1992. He attended college at the University of Arkansas as a Sturgis Fellow. He majored in Biology and minored in Computer Science, graduating summa cum laude in 1996. His honors thesis described the design of software for the analysis of genetic sequences.

He carried this interest in bioinformatics to graduate school at the University of Washington’s Molecular Biotechnology department. There he studied proteomics as a graduate student under John Yates. The laboratory moved to The Scripps Research Institute in 2000. David worked closely with Vicki Wysocki’s group at the University of Arizona in characterizing peptide fragmentation during low-energy Collision Induced Dissociation through a series of key papers. David created software for data mining proteomic results to extract biological information more consistently and rapidly; "DTASelect" has become one of the most widely used software tools in proteomics. He leveraged his understanding of peptide fragmentation to create the first fully-automated sequence tag infrastructure in the "GutenTag" software package.

In 2003, David completed his Ph.D. and began a post-doctoral fellowship at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. While there, he developed "DBDigger," a novel database search algorithm that streamlined the process of proteomic identification. He focused on reducing the redundancy of these data sets through the creation of "MS2Grouper," a tool that employs graph theory to examine spectral inter-relationships. Dr. Tabb also examined the use of high-resolution mass spectra for the purpose of peptide charge state inference.

In 2005, David joined the faculty of Vanderbilt University Medical Center to lead a group in the Mass Spectrometry Research Center. In 2006, he was appointed as an assistant professor in the Biochemistry Department as well. His work focuses on identifying peptides more successfully from clinical samples, specifically peptides that have mutated or modified peptide sequences.
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