Barker, Sylwia J., Laurynas Dagys, William Hale, Barbara Ripka, James Eills, Manvendra Sharma, Malcolm H. Levitt, and Marcel Utz. “Direct Production of a Hyperpolarized Metabolite on a Microfluidic Chip.” Analytical Chemistry, February 11, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.1c05030.
Microfluidic systems hold great potential for the study of live microscopic cultures of cells, tissue samples, and small organisms. Integration of hyperpolarization would enable quantitative studies of metabolism in such volume limited systems by high-resolution NMR spectroscopy. We demonstrate, for the first time, the integrated generation and detection of a hyperpolarized metabolite on a microfluidic chip. The metabolite [1-13C]fumarate is produced in a nuclear hyperpolarized form by (i) introducing para-enriched hydrogen into the solution by diffusion through a polymer membrane, (ii) reaction with a substrate in the presence of a ruthenium-based catalyst, and (iii) conversion of the singlet-polarized reaction product into a magnetized form by the application of a radiofrequency pulse sequence, all on the same microfluidic chip. The microfluidic device delivers a continuous flow of hyperpolarized material at the 2.5 μL/min scale, with a polarization level of 4%. We demonstrate two methods for mitigating singlet–triplet mixing effects which otherwise reduce the achieved polarization level.