A roadmap to high-resolution standard microcoil MAS NMR spectroscopy for metabolomics.
Alan WongPublished in: NMR in biomedicine (2021)
Current microcoil probe technology has emerged as a significant advancement in NMR applications to biofluids research. It has continued to excel as a hyphenated tool with other prominent microdevices, opening many new possibilities in multiple omics fields. However, this does not hold for biological samples such as intact tissue or organisms, due to the considerable challenges of incorporating the microcoil in a magic-angle spinning (MAS) probe without relinquishing the high-resolution spectral data. Not until 2012 did a microcoil MAS probe show promise in profiling the metabolome in a submilligram tissue biopsy with spectral resolution on par with conventional high-resolution MAS (HR-MAS) NMR. This result subsequently triggered a great interest in the possibility of NMR analysis with microgram tissues and striving toward the probe development of "high-resolution" capable microcoil MAS NMR spectroscopy. This review gives an overview of the issues and challenges in the probe development and summarizes the advancements toward metabolomics.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- living cells
- quantum dots
- optical coherence tomography
- solid state
- high speed
- tandem mass spectrometry
- fluorescent probe
- big data
- gene expression
- magnetic resonance
- single molecule
- electronic health record
- computed tomography
- gas chromatography
- machine learning
- artificial intelligence
- simultaneous determination
- fine needle aspiration
- contrast enhanced