Real-time metabolic monitoring on a chip: What happens inside a cell can be measured instantly

Olivia Bennett
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Real-time metabolic monitoring on a chip: What happens inside a cell can be measured instantly

Real-time metabolic monitoring on a chip: What happens inside a cell can be measured instantly
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Real-time metabolic monitoring on a chip: What happens inside a cell can be measured instantly
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Landmark in real-time metabolic monitoring on chip: BLOC benchtop NMR comes to light
Photo of the desktop NMR spectrometer developed within the framework of the European project BLOC. Credit: Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC)

In a significant advancement for lab-on-chip technology, IBEC researchers in the frame of the European project BLOC, have demonstrated the first integration of a benchtop nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrometer with a microfluidic cell culture platform capable of real-time metabolic monitoring, made feasible by employing quantum-enhanced NMR techniques to dramatically increase signal sensitivity.

Why metabolic monitoring needs an upgrade

Metabolic analysis of living cells in vitro is central to understanding cellular physiology, disease mechanisms, and responses to treatments. Traditional methods for monitoring metabolism often rely on offline assays or sophisticated high-field instruments that are expensive and require large sample volumes.

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NMR spectroscopy, with its unparalleled ability to differentiate chemical species noninvasively, has long promised rich insight into biochemical processes, but its inherently low sensitivity has limited its use in microscale contexts. This challenge is particularly acute in microfluidic platforms, where sample volumes are minimal and metabolic processes evolve dynamically.

Hyperpolarization brings benchtop NMR to chips

The recent study introduces a benchtop NMR spectrometer adapted for dissolution Dynamic Nuclear Polarization (dDNP), a hyperpolarization technique that enhances nuclear spin polarization far beyond thermal equilibrium, boosting NMR signal intensity by several orders of magnitude. By exploiting this enhancement, the authors were able to overcome the classical sensitivity limitations of compact NMR hardware and detect metabolic changes in real time in cell cultures flowing through custom microfluidic devices.

The development of this new technology was the main objective of BLOC: Benchtop NMR for lab-on a-chip, run from 1 January 2020 to 31 December 2023, coordinated by Irene Marco-Rius, principal investigator of the Molecular Imaging for Precision Medicine group at the Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC). The paper is published in the journal Analytical Chemistry.

Engineering real-time views of cell metabolism

The integration of benchtop NMR with microfluidics involved careful engineering of the detection system and fluid handling, allowing hyperpolarized metabolites introduced into the cell culture environment to be observed as they were taken up and transformed by cells. This approach yields kinetic data on metabolic reactions without interrupting the culture or requiring large cell populations, a key advantage for studies of rare or precious biological samples. The researchers demonstrated that crucial metabolic conversions could be observed continuously, providing a time-resolved window into the biochemical state of the cells under study.

The results represent a milestone for on-chip metabolomics: a compact, cost-effective NMR platform capable of direct observation of dynamic metabolic fluxes in microfluidic systems. By leveraging hyperpolarization, the technology bridges the gap between high-field NMR performance and the practical needs of lab-on-chip analysis, declares Marc Azagra, first author of the study.

New horizons for research and medicine

Looking forward, this research opens promising perspectives for a wide range of applications in life sciences, drug discovery, and precision medicine. The ability to track metabolic pathways in real time on miniaturized platforms could transform how experiments are designed and interpreted, enabling longitudinal studies of cellular responses, high-throughput screening of metabolic modulators, and integration with other lab-on-chip modules such as organ-mimetic tissues.

As benchtop NMR technology continues to mature, its combination with microfluidics and hyperpolarization may become a mainstream tool for dynamic biological analysis, bringing rich spectroscopic information directly to the scale of cellular microenvironments, concludes Irene Marco-Rius.

Publication details

Marc Azagra et al, Lab-on-a-Chip Metabolic Analysis Using Benchtop NMR Technology, Analytical Chemistry (2026). DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.5c04319

Journal information:
Analytical Chemistry

Key medical concepts

NMR SpectroscopiesMetabolomics

Clinical categories

Laboratory medicine

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Real-time metabolic monitoring on a chip: What happens inside a cell can be measured instantly (2026, March 10)
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Olivia Bennett (she/her) is a health education specialist and medical writer dedicated to providing clear, evidence-based health information. She holds a strong academic background in public health and clinical sciences, with advanced training from respected institutions in the United States and the United Kingdom.   Bennett earned her Bachelor of Science in Public Health from the University of Michigan. She later completed her Doctor of Medicine (MD) at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, where she developed a deep interest in preventive care and patient education.   To further strengthen her expertise in global and community health, she obtained a Master of Science in Global Health and Development from the University College London. She also completed a Postgraduate Certificate in Clinical Nutrition at the King's College London.   Since completing her studies, Bennett has worked in both clinical and health communication roles, contributing to medical blogs, health platforms, and public awareness campaigns. Her work focuses on translating complex medical research into practical guidance that everyday readers can understand and apply.   In 2021, she began specializing in digital health education, helping online health platforms maintain medically accurate, reader-friendly content. Her key areas of focus include: Preventive healthcare Women’s health Mental health awareness Chronic disease management (diabetes, hypertension) Nutrition and lifestyle medicine   Bennett believes that trustworthy health information should be accessible to everyone. Her goal is to empower readers to make informed decisions about their well-being through clear, compassionate, and research-backed guidance.   Outside of her professional work, she enjoys reading medical journals, participating in community wellness initiatives, and mentoring aspiring health writers.
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