Abstract

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments on subnanoliter (sub-nL) volumes are hindered by the limited sensitivity of the detector and the difficulties in positioning and holding such small samples in proximity of the detector. In this work, we report on NMR experiments on liquid and biological entities immersed in liquids having volumes down to 100 pL. These measurements are enabled by the fabrication of high spatial resolution 3D printed microfluidic structures, specifically conceived to guide and confine sub-nL samples in the sub-nL most sensitive volume of a single-chip integrated NMR probe. The microfluidic structures are fabricated using a two-photon polymerization 3D printing technique having a resolution better than 1 μm3. The high spatial resolution 3D printing approach adopted here allows to rapidly fabricate complex microfluidic structures tailored to position, hold, and feed biological samples, with a design that maximizes the NMR signals amplitude and minimizes the static magnetic field inhomogeneities. The layer separating the sample from the microcoil, crucial to exploit the volume of maximum sensitivity of the detector, has a thickness of 10 μm. To demonstrate the potential of this approach, we report NMR experiments on sub-nL intact biological entities in liquid media, specifically ova of the tardigrade Richtersius coronifer and sections of Caenorhabditis elegans nematodes. We show a sensitivity of 2.5x1013 spins/Hz1/2 on 1H nuclei at 7 T, sufficient to detect 6 pmol of 1H nuclei of endogenous compounds in active volumes down to 100 pL and in a measurement time of 3 hours. Spectral resolutions of 0.01 ppm in liquid samples and of 0.1 ppm in the investigated biological entities are also demonstrated. The obtained results may indicate a route for NMR studies at the single unit level of important biological entities having sub-nL volumes, such as living microscopic organisms and eggs of several mammalians, humans included.

Highlights

  • nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments on sub-nL volumes are hindered by the limited sensitivity of the detector and the difficulties in positioning and holding such small samples in proximity of the excitation/detection microcoils

  • We show the first examples of NMR experiments on liquids and biological entities immersed in liquids having active volumes down to 100 pL

  • These measurements are enabled by the successful design and fabrication of high spatial resolution 3D printed microfluidic structures, conceived to guide and confine sub-nL samples in the sub-nL most sensitive volume of a single-chip integrated NMR detector

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Summary

Introduction

The single-chip CMOS detector offer a robust planar working surface, but its very small detection volume (about 0.2 nL) sets challenging fabrication constraints for the microfluidic design, which must hold the sample in close proximity of the microcoil without introducing significant static magnetic field inhomogeneities. To overcome these challenges, we fabricated microfluidic structures using a high spatial resolution 3D printer (Photonic Professionals GT, Nanoscribe GmbH, Germany), based on a two-photon polymerization process [62,63] and having a resolution better than 1 μm. To demonstrate the validity of our approach, we 150 μm b

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