Hi thanasisk,
Really very low noise such as for a good dynamic microphone amplifier or a band microphone is something quite different from a low noise amplifier with an input impedance of 1Meg.
You have to decide what you want, whether you want it or not.

You can build an amplifier with a Fet input like with the 2SK170 and its family,
but it will always have a large input capacity and the bandwidth of that amplifier will depend on your steering-impedance.
The latest version of The Art Of Electronics contains a few amplifiers with graphs of the bandwidth to be achieved with respect to the input impedance.
To measure low noise of power supplies and voltage references, you do not need a 1Meg input impedance, 10 to 20K is usually sufficient.
It usually comes down to the fact that you will need more than one type of preamplifier for your LAB.
Then again, don't just think of amplifiers, but also of filters!
Often it is useful to have some filters available after the first amplifier stage so that e.g. hum can be removed via a notch filter without overloading your measuring device.
A second handy filter is 400Hz High Pass to filter everything below that frequency.
Think of 12 to 18dB per octave for the filters and 50dB for the notch.
Kind regards,
Bram