Probably the best practice is to group these items and break them into different sentences.
My graduate education enabled me to gainfully employ the basic laws of physics and their applications: Maxwell’s equations, lumped circuit abstractions, and amplifier abstraction. I have also worked in the digital domain, using combinational logic, clocked systems, instructions set abstraction, high level language, operating systems, and software abstractions. Finally I am experienced in the analog domain, using operational amplifiers, oscillators, power supplies, rotating machines, power transmission and distribution.
You can also use semicolons to separate groups and then commas to separate items within each group, but this is a long, painful sentence and readers usually don't appreciate that.
I have seen native speakers using "from there into" in cases like these but it's not good writing. The implication is that you have "gone" from one area into another area, but without explicitly saying that you have moved from one place to another, the use of "from there into" sounds like you got confused by your own sentence and given up on good grammar.