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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38393852

ABSTRACT

In situ monitoring of bacterial growth can greatly benefit human healthcare, biomedical research, and hygiene management. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) offers two key advantages in tracking bacterial growth: non-invasive monitoring through opaque sample containers and no need for sample pretreatment such as labeling. However, the large size and high cost of conventional MRI systems are the roadblocks for in situ monitoring. Here, we proposed a small, portable MRI system by combining a small permanent magnet and an integrated radio-frequency (RF) electronic chip that excites and reads out nuclear spin motions in a sample, and utilize this small MRI platform for in situ imaging of bacterial growth and biofilm formation. We demonstrate that MRI images taken by the miniature--and thus broadly deployable for in situ work--MRI system provide information on the spatial distribution of bacterial density, and a sequential set of MRI images taken at different times inform the temporal change of the spatial map of bacterial density, showing bacterial growth.

2.
Anal Chem ; 92(2): 2112-2120, 2020 01 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31894967

ABSTRACT

Portable NMR combining a permanent magnet and a complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuit has recently emerged to offer the long desired online, on-demand, or in situ NMR analysis of small molecules for chemistry and biology. Here we take this cutting-edge technology to the next level by introducing parallelism to a state-of-the-art portable NMR platform to accelerate its experimental throughput, where NMR is notorious for inherently low throughput. With multiple (N) samples inside a single magnet, we perform simultaneous NMR analyses using a single silicon electronic chip, going beyond the traditional single-sample-per-magnet paradigm. We execute the parallel analyses via either time-interleaving or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In the time-interleaving method, the N samples occupy N separate NMR coils: we connect these N NMR coils to the single silicon chip one after another and repeat these sequential NMR scans. This time-interleaving is an effective parallelization, given a long recovery time of a single NMR scan. To demonstrate this time-interleaved parallelism, we use N = 2 for high-resolution multidimensional spectroscopy such as J-coupling resolved free induction decay spectroscopy and correlation spectroscopy (COSY) with the field homogeneity carefully optimized (<0.16 ppm) and N = 4 for multidimensional relaxometry such as diffusion-edited T2 mapping and T1-T2 correlation mapping, expediting the throughput by 2-4 times. In the MRI technique, the N samples (N = 18 in our demonstration) share 1 NMR coil connected to the single silicon chip and are imaged all at once multiple times, which reveals the relaxation time of all N samples simultaneously. This imaging-based approach accelerates the relaxation time measurement by 4.5 times, and it could be by 18 times if the signal-to-noise were not limited. Overall, this work demonstrates the first portable high-resolution multidimensional NMR with throughput-accelerating parallelism.

3.
Lab Chip ; 16(19): 3664-3681, 2016 09 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27713991

ABSTRACT

Complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology enables low-cost and large-scale integration of transistors and physical sensing materials on tiny chips (e.g., <1 cm2), seamlessly combining the two key functions of biosensors: transducing and signal processing. Recent CMOS biosensors unified different transducing mechanisms (impedance, fluorescence, and nuclear spin) and readout electronics have demonstrated competitive sensitivity for in vitro diagnosis, such as detection of DNA (down to 10 aM), protein (down to 10 fM), or bacteria/cells (single cell). Herein, we detail the recent advances in CMOS biosensors, centering on their key principles, requisites, and applications. Together, these may contribute to the advancement of our healthcare system, which should be decentralized by broadly utilizing point-of-care diagnostic tools.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques/methods , Metals/chemistry , Oxides/chemistry , Semiconductors , Transducers , Biosensing Techniques/instrumentation
4.
Analyst ; 140(15): 5129-37, 2015 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26034784

ABSTRACT

Herein, we describe a micro-nuclear magnetic resonance (µNMR) relaxometer miniaturized to palm-size and electronically automated for multi-step and multi-sample chemical/biological diagnosis. The co-integration of microfluidic and microelectronic technologies enables an association between the droplet managements and µNMR assays inside a portable sub-Tesla magnet (1.2 kg, 0.46 Tesla). Targets in unprocessed biological samples, captured by specific probe-decorated magnetic nanoparticles (NPs), can be sequentially quantified by their spin-spin relaxation time (T2) via multiplexed µNMR screening. Distinct droplet samples are operated by a digital microfluidic device that electronically manages the electrowetting-on-dielectric effects over an electrode array. Each electrode (3.5 × 3.5 mm(2)) is scanned with capacitive sensing to locate the distinct droplet samples in real time. A cross-domain-optimized butterfly-coil-input semiconductor transceiver transduces between magnetic and electrical signals to/from a sub-10 µL droplet sample for high-sensitivity µNMR screening. A temperature logger senses the ambient temperature (0 to 40 °C) and a backend processor calibrates the working frequency for the transmitter to precisely excite the protons. In our experiments, the µNMR relaxometer quantifies avidin using biotinylated Iron NPs (Φ: 30 nm, [Fe]: 0.5 mM) with a sensitivity of 0.2 µM. Auto-handling and identification of two targets (avidin and water) are demonstrated and completed within 2.2 min. This µNMR relaxometer holds promise for combinatorial chemical/biological diagnostic protocols using closed-loop electronic automation.


Subject(s)
Avidin/analysis , Iron/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/instrumentation , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Microfluidic Analytical Techniques/instrumentation , Semiconductors , Biotinylation , Electrowetting , Lab-On-A-Chip Devices
5.
Analyst ; 139(23): 6204-13, 2014 Dec 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25315808

ABSTRACT

We present a modular nuclear magnetic resonance-digital microfluidics (NMR-DMF) system as a portable diagnostic platform for miniaturized biological assays. With increasing number of combinations between designed probes and a specific target, NMR has become an accurate and rapid assay tool, which is capable of detecting particular kinds of proteins, DNAs, bacteria and cells with a customized probe quantitatively. Traditional sample operation (e.g., manipulation and mixing) relied heavily on human efforts. We herein propose a modular NMR-DMF system to allow the electronic automation of multi-step reaction-screening protocols. A figure-8 shaped coil is proposed to enlarge the usable inner space of a portable magnet by 4.16 times, generating a radio frequency (RF) excitation field in the planar direction. By electronically managing the electro-wetting-on-dielectric (EWOD) effects over an electrode array, preloaded droplets with the inclusion of biological constituents and targets can be programmed to mix and be guided to the detection site (3.5 × 3.5 mm(2)) for high-sensitivity NMR screening (static B field: 0.46 T, RF field: 1.43 mT per ampere), with the result (voltage signal) displayed in real-time. To show the system's utility, automated real-time identification of 100 pM of avidin in a 14 µL droplet was achieved. The system shows promise as a robust and portable diagnostic device for a wide variety of biological analyses and screening applications.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/chemistry , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/instrumentation , Microfluidics/instrumentation , Molecular Probes/chemistry , Avidin/chemistry , Iron , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Microfluidics/methods
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