Functional analysis proof of Ramanujan's Master Theorem

Write $$ (M\Psi)(s)=\int^{\infty}_{0}\Psi(t)t^{s-1}dt, $$ where $s\in A_{\Psi}$ with $$ A_{\Psi}:=\left\{s\in\textbf{C}:\int^{\infty}_{0}\Psi(t)t^{s-1}dt<\infty\right\}. $$ Then we have the next Mellin inversion formula $$ \Psi(z)=\frac{1}{2\pi i}\int^{\sigma+i\infty}_{\sigma-i\infty}(M\Psi)(s)z^{-s}ds, $$ where $\sigma\in Re\left(A_{\Psi}\right)$.

Theorem 1. If $\Psi(z)$ have power series arround $0$ with radious of convergence $r>0$ and if $x\in\textbf{R}$ such that $$ \int^{\infty}_{0}\left|\Psi(t)\right|t^{x-1}dt<+\infty. $$ Then the Mellin transform of $\Psi$ can be analyticaly continued to a meromorphic function in the halphplane $Re(z)<x$, with poles at the points $z=-m$, $m$ is non-negative integers such $m>-x$.

Theorem 2. Let $x>0$ and $f,\Psi$ analytic in $\textbf{C}$ and satisfining the condition $$ |f(z)(M\Psi)(x+iz)|\leq C (1+|z|)^{\lambda}e^{-\delta |Re(z)|},\tag 1 $$ for all $z$ such that $Im(z)\geq 0$ and $c,\lambda,\delta>0$ constants, with the condition that $|z|=x+N+1/2$, where $N-$natural number saficiently large. Then the integral $$ \int^{\infty}_{-\infty}f(t)M\Psi(x+it)dt $$ converges absolutely, the series $$ \sum^{\infty}_{m=0}\frac{\Psi^{(m)}(0)}{m!}f(i(x+m)) $$ converges in Abel sence and $$ \int^{\infty}_{-\infty}f(t)(M\Psi)(x+it)dt=2\pi\lim_{r\rightarrow 1}\sum^{\infty}_{m=0}\frac{\Psi^{(m)}(0)}{m!}f(i(x+m))r^m.\tag 2 $$ Moreover if $$ \left|\frac{\Psi^{(m)}(0)}{m!}f(i(x+m))\right|\leq \frac{C'}{m+1}, $$ then (2) converges.

As application of the above theorem we have

Theorem 3. Let $f$ be analytic in the upper half plane $Im(z)>0$ and continuous in $Im(z)\geq 0$ and such that $$ |f(z)|\leq C (1+|z|)^{\rho}\left(\frac{|z|}{e}\right)^{Im(z)}e^{b|Re(z)|}, $$ in $Im(z)\geq 0$, where $0\leq b\leq \pi/2$. Then for $x>0$ we have $$ \int^{\infty}_{-\infty}f(t)\Gamma(x+it)dt=2\pi\lim_{r\rightarrow1}\sum^{\infty}_{m=0}\frac{(-1)^m}{m!}f(i(x+m))r^m $$

Theorem 3 is Ramanujan's Master Theorem.

I have full proofs of that in my PhD thesis but there are written in Greek (see Researchgate: Nikos Bagis).