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Article
A microfluidic chip for on-line derivatization and application to in vivo neurochemical monitoring.
Analyst (2021)
  • Alec C. Valenta, University of Michigan
  • Cara I. D'Amico, University of Michigan
  • Colleen E. Dugan, University of Michigan
  • James P. Grinias, University of Michigan
  • Robert T. Kennedy, University of Michigan
Abstract
Microfluidic chips can perform a broad range of automated fluid manipulation operations for chemical analysis including on-line reactions. Derivatization reactions carried out on-chip reduce manual sample preparation and improve experimental throughput. In this work we develop a chip for on-line benzoyl chloride derivatization coupled to microdialysis, an in vivo sampling technique. Benzoyl chloride derivatization is useful for the analysis of small molecule neurochemicals in complex biological matrices using HPLC-MS/MS. The addition of one or more benzoyl groups to small, polar compounds containing amines, phenols, thiols, and certain alcohols improves reversed phase chromatographic retention, electrospray ionization efficiency, and analyte stability. The current derivatization protocol requires a three-step manual sample preparation, which ultimately limits the utility of this method for rapid sample collection and large sample sets. A glass microfluidic chip was developed for derivatizing microdialysis fractions on-line as they exit the probe for collection and off-line analysis with HPLC-MS/MS. Calibration curves for 21 neurochemicals prepared using the on-chip method showed linearity (R2 > 0.99), limits of detection (0.1-500 nM), and peak area RSDs (4-14%) comparable to manual derivatization. Method temporal resolution was investigated both in vitro and in vivo showing rapid rise times for all analytes, which was limited by fraction length (3 min) rather than the device. The platform was applied to basal measurements in the striatum of awake rats where 19 of 21 neurochemicals were above the limit of detection. For a typical 2 h study, a minimum of 120 pipetting steps are eliminated per animal. Such a device provides a useful tool for the analysis of small molecules in biological matrices which may extend beyond microdialysis to other sampling techniques.

Disciplines
Publication Date
February 8, 2021
DOI
10.1039/D0AN01729A
Citation Information
Alec C. Valenta, Cara I. D'Amico, Colleen E. Dugan, James P. Grinias, et al.. "A microfluidic chip for on-line derivatization and application to in vivo neurochemical monitoring." Analyst Vol. 146 Iss. 3 (2021) p. 825 - 834
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/james-grinias/22/