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Papers
20 resultsShowing papers similar to Whole-Tissue Distribution Analysis for Visualization of Nanoplastics in the Mouse Brain
ClearCorrelative spectroscopy and microscopy analysis of micro- and nanoplastics in complex biological matrices
Researchers combined fluorescence microscopy, second harmonic generation imaging, and coherent Raman scattering to detect and map micro- and nanoplastics in lung cells, zebrafish, and mouse tissues. Polystyrene nanoplastics were found to cross the blood-brain barrier and accumulate in lipid-rich brain regions in animal models.
Imaging and quantifying the biological uptake and distribution of nanoplastics using a dual-functional model material
This study used advanced imaging techniques to visualize and quantify nanoplastic uptake and distribution in biological systems, tracking particle translocation from exposure routes into tissues and characterizing intracellular localization.
Correlative spectroscopy and microscopy analysis of micro- and nanoplastics in complex biological matrices
Researchers combined fluorescence, second harmonic generation, and coherent Raman scattering microscopy in a single instrument to image micro- and nanoplastics in lung cells, zebrafish, and mouse tissues. Polystyrene nanoplastics crossed the blood-brain barrier and accumulated in lipid-rich brain regions in mouse models.
A quantitative study of nanoplastics within cells using magnetic resonance imaging
Researchers developed a magnetic resonance imaging strategy to quantify nanoplastics internalized by mouse macrophage cells, providing a novel non-invasive approach for tracking nanoplastic uptake and distribution within living organisms.
Cortex-Wide, Cellular-Resolution Volumetric Imaging with a Modular Two-Photon Imaging Platform
This paper presents Meso2P, a new two-photon microscope capable of imaging the entire mouse cortex at single-cell resolution — a significant advance in neuroscience instrumentation. Among its demonstrated applications is the ability to track the distribution of micro- and nanoplastic particles in living brain tissue in real time. While primarily a neuroscience tool, its capacity to visualize nanoplastics in the brain non-invasively could become valuable for directly studying how plastic particles move through and accumulate in neural tissue.
Tissue Clearing To Localize Microplastics via Three-Dimensional Imaging of Whole Organisms
Researchers developed a tissue-clearing technique that renders whole organisms transparent after microplastic ingestion, allowing 3D fluorescence imaging to precisely locate unlabeled environmental microplastics inside an organism without destroying tissue. Unlike conventional digestion methods that lose spatial information, this approach preserves the organism's structure while a fluorescent dye selectively stains the plastics. This tool could substantially improve our understanding of where microplastics accumulate within living organisms and what tissues they affect.
Morphological and chemical characterization of nanoplastics in human tissue
Researchers developed methods to visualize and chemically characterize nanoplastics that have accumulated in human tissue samples. They were able to identify plastic particles smaller than one micrometer within tissue using advanced microscopy and spectroscopy techniques. The study provides some of the first direct evidence of nanoscale plastic accumulation in the human body, which is essential for designing future health effects research.
Using Tissue clearing for the analysis of ingested microplastic particles
Researchers adapted the CUBIC tissue clearing protocol to render normally opaque aquatic and terrestrial organisms transparent, enabling three-dimensional visualization of fluorescently labeled microplastic particles within intact digestive systems. The method successfully achieved transparency across organisms from different functional feeding groups, offering improved spatial resolution for studying MP accumulation sites without destructive dissection.
Imaging and quantifying the biological uptake and distribution of nanoplastics using a dual-functional model material
Researchers developed a dual-functional nanoplastic model material that allows both imaging and precise quantification of nanoplastic uptake in biological systems. Using surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, they could track where nanoplastics accumulated in organisms at high resolution. The tool addresses a major gap in nanoplastic research by enabling more accurate measurement of how these tiny particles interact with living tissues.
Evidence on Invasion of Blood, Adipose Tissues, Nervous System and Reproductive System of Mice After a Single Oral Exposure: Nanoplastics versus Microplastics.
Researchers found that after a single oral exposure in mice, nanoplastics were rapidly absorbed into the blood, accumulated in fat tissues, and crossed both the blood-brain and blood-testis barriers. The study demonstrated that the distribution and behavior of plastic particles in mammals is strongly dependent on particle size, with nanoplastics showing substantially greater tissue penetration than microplastics.
Advancements in optical techniques for direct identification and localization of micro- and nanoplastics in biological samples
Researchers reviewed advanced optical methods for directly detecting and localizing microplastics in biological tissues, highlighting techniques that can identify particles without extraction or digestion. Optical approaches including Raman mapping and coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering allow spatial mapping of microplastics in tissue sections.
In vivo super-resolution of the brain – How to visualize the hidden nanoplasticity?
Researchers reviewed how super-resolution fluorescence microscopy techniques — which allow scientists to image structures smaller than what conventional light microscopes can resolve — are being used to study the nanoscale structure and plasticity of brain synapses in living mice. These imaging advances help reveal how tiny changes in brain connections relate to learning and memory, using "nanoplasticity" in its neurological sense rather than as a reference to plastic pollution.
New universal approach for microplastics detection in tissues retains histology and reveals unprecedented quantities in placental samples
Researchers developed a new universal method for detecting micro- and nanoplastics in tissue samples that preserves tissue histology, allowing simultaneous plastic detection and morphological analysis of the same sample to better characterize MP tissue distribution and pathological effects.
Single-Particle Resolution Fluorescence Microscopy of Nanoplastics
Researchers developed a super-resolution fluorescence microscopy technique that enables single-particle detection and precise localization of nanoplastics in biological tissues and environmental samples. This advancement addresses a major limitation in nanoplastic research, as conventional microscopy lacks the resolution to distinguish individual nanoplastics from background fluorescence or free dye.
Detection of nano- and microplastics in mammalian tissue
Researchers detected nano- and microplastics in mammalian tissue samples using sensitive analytical techniques, confirming particle accumulation in organs beyond the gastrointestinal tract. The findings demonstrate that small plastic particles can translocate from the gut to systemic tissues.
Imaging dendritic spines in the hippocampus of a living mouse by 3D-stimulated emission depletion microscopy
This paper is not about microplastics; it presents an in vivo 3D super-resolution microscopy methodology for imaging dendritic spines in the mouse hippocampus.
Semiquantitative assessment of the distribution of microplastic particles in the body during acute exposure
Researchers developed and validated a semi-quantitative method to assess microplastic distribution across organs in rats under acute exposure conditions, using fluorescent particles of three sizes (100, 500, 1000 nm) to map accumulation patterns — finding size-dependent biodistribution with smaller particles reaching more tissues.
Biodistribution of nanoplastics in mice: advancing analytical techniques using metal-doped plastics
Researchers developed a new analytical method using palladium-doped nanoplastics to track where plastic particles go in the body after ingestion in mice. They found that after short-term exposure, most particles passed through the digestive system and were excreted, but longer-term exposure led to accumulation in body tissues. The study advances the ability to detect and trace nanoplastics at extremely small concentrations in biological samples.
Distribution and Tissue Damage After a Single Microplastic Exposure in Mice
Researchers administered fluorescent microplastics to mice by oral gavage and tracked their distribution through the body over several hours. They found direct evidence of microplastic particles in the blood, lungs, brain, kidneys, liver, and spleen, with fluorescence peaking at two hours after exposure. Histological examination revealed mild tissue damage including congestion in the liver and lungs, providing evidence that ingested microplastics can enter the bloodstream and reach multiple organs.
Numerical Study towards In Vivo Tracking of Micro-/Nanoplastic Based on X-ray Fluorescence Imaging
Researchers conducted numerical simulations to evaluate X-ray fluorescence imaging as a method for tracking micro- and nanoplastic particles inside living organisms. The study found that by labeling plastic particles with detectable metal elements, it would be possible to map their distribution across organs with high spatial resolution. The approach could provide precise measurements of how plastic particles cross biological barriers and accumulate in tissues over time.