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Physicochemical mechanisms of microplastics adsorption by wheat bran insoluble dietary fiber in simulated intestinal fluid.

Food chemistry 2026

Summary

Researchers tested wheat bran insoluble dietary fiber as an edible gut-level microplastic trap, finding it adsorbs MPs through pore-filling and van der Waals interactions — with hemicellulose as the most active component — and that oral administration reduced intestinal microplastic burden and inflammation in mice.

Body Systems
Models
Study Type In vivo

This study investigated wheat bran insoluble dietary fiber (WBIDF) as an edible adsorbent to mitigate intestinal microplastic (MPs) pollution. Combining in vitro simulations with in vivo mouse models, it elucidated WBIDF's adsorption mechanisms for MPs. Adsorption in simulated intestinal fluid was concentration-dependent and more effective for 1 μm versus 5 μm MPs (1.01 ± 0.05 and 0.83 ± 0.09 mg/g at a concentration of 50 mg/L, respectively), primarily via pore-filling and surface deposition. Spectral and computational analyses confirmed van der Waals interactions as dominant, with hemicellulose showing the highest affinity, with key sites involving ether bonds and hydroxyl groups in cellulose/hemicellulose, and aromatic rings in lignin via π-π stacking. In vivo intervention dose-dependently reduced intestinal MPs burden, alleviated systemic inflammation, and protected the colonic mucosal barrier in mice. The synergistic porous structure and components of WBIDF enable efficient MPs adsorption, establishing a foundation for edible strategies against gut MPs accumulation.

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