NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
Trending
TrumpTariffTradeLaunchAnnouncePricesStrikesMajorFebruaryChinaMarketCourtNewsDigestSundayTimelineHongKongServiceMilitaryTechSafetyGlobalOil
TrumpTariffTradeLaunchAnnouncePricesStrikesMajorFebruaryChinaMarketCourtNewsDigestSundayTimelineHongKongServiceMilitaryTechSafetyGlobalOil
All Articles
Science Daily
Published 9 days ago

Scientists make microplastics glow to see what they do inside your body

Science Daily · Feb 13, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

Microplastics and nanoplastics are now found everywhere on Earth, from ocean depths to agricultural soils and even inside the human body. Yet scientists still struggle to understand what these particles actually do once they enter living organisms. A new study proposes an innovative fluorescence-based strategy that could allow researchers to track microplastics in real time as they move, transform, and degrade inside biological systems.

Full Article

Tiny plastic fragments known as microplastics and nanoplastics have spread across the planet. They have been found in deep ocean waters, farmland soils, wildlife, and even inside the human body. Despite their widespread presence, researchers still do not fully understand what happens after these particles enter living organisms. A new study outlines a fluorescence-based technique that could allow scientists to monitor microplastics in real time as they move through the body, change chemically, and eventually break down. Plastic production worldwide now surpasses 460 million tons per year. Each year, millions of tons of microscopic plastic particles are released into the environment. Scientists have identified these particles in marine animals, birds, and human tissues including blood, liver, and even brain samples. Laboratory experiments suggest exposure may be linked to inflammation, organ damage, and developmental problems. Even so, a critical knowledge gap remains about how these particles behave once inside living systems. "Most current methods give us only a snapshot in time," said corresponding author Wenhong Fan. "We can measure how many particles are present in a tissue, but we cannot directly observe how they travel, accumulate, transform, or break down inside living organisms." Limits of Current Microplastic Detection Methods Common detection tools such as infrared spectroscopy and mass spectrometry require scientists to destroy tissue samples in order to analyze them. This approach prevents researchers from watching how particles behave over time. Fluorescence imaging offers a possible solution, but current labeling techniques often face problems such as fading signals, leaking dyes, or reduced brightness in complex biological environments. A New Fluorescent Strategy for Real-Time Tracking To address these limitations, the team designed what they call a fluorescent monomer controlled synthesis strategy. Rather than coating plastic particles with fluorescent dye, they incorporated light-emitting components directly into the plastic's molecular structure. The method uses aggregation induced emission materials, which glow more intensely when clustered together. This design helps maintain a stable signal and reduces the loss of brightness during imaging. With this technique, researchers can fine-tune particle brightness, color of emitted light, size, and shape. Because the fluorescent material is evenly distributed throughout each particle, both whole plastics and the smaller fragments created as they degrade remain visible. That capability opens the door to tracking the full life cycle of microplastics, from ingestion and internal transport to transformation and final breakdown. Understanding Health and Environmental Risks The strategy is still being tested experimentally, but it is based on established principles from polymer chemistry and biocompatible fluorescence imaging. The researchers say the approach could become an important tool for studying how microplastics interact with cells, tissues, and organs. "Clarifying the transport and transformation processes of microplastics inside organisms is essential for assessing their true ecological and health risks," Fan said. "Dynamic tracking will help us move beyond simple exposure measurements toward a deeper understanding of toxicity mechanisms." As worries about plastic pollution intensify, tools that reveal how microplastics behave inside living systems may play a key role in improving risk assessments and guiding future environmental regulations.


Share this story

Read Original at Science Daily

Related Articles

Science Dailyabout 3 hours ago
Pecans found to improve cholesterol and boost heart health

A sweeping new scientific review suggests that pecans — America’s native nut — may pack more heart power than many people realize. After analyzing over 20 years of research, scientists found consistent evidence that eating pecans can improve key markers of cardiovascular health, including total cholesterol and “bad” LDL cholesterol, while also supporting antioxidant defenses.

Science Dailyabout 4 hours ago
New oxygen gel could prevent amputation in diabetic wound patients

Chronic wounds often spiral out of control because oxygen can’t reach the deepest layers of injured tissue. A new gel developed at UC Riverside delivers a continuous flow of oxygen right where it’s needed most, using a tiny battery-powered system. In high-risk mice, wounds healed in weeks instead of worsening. The innovation could dramatically reduce amputations—and may even open doors for lab-grown organs.

Science Dailyabout 5 hours ago
Triceratops had a giant nose that may have cooled its massive head

Triceratops’ massive head may have been doing more than just showing off those famous horns. Using CT scans and 3D reconstructions of fossil skulls, researchers uncovered a surprisingly complex nasal system hidden inside its enormous snout. Instead of being just a supersized nose for smelling, it likely housed intricate networks of nerves and blood vessels—and even special structures that helped regulate heat and moisture.

Science Dailyabout 9 hours ago
A simple water shift could turn Arctic farmland into a carbon sink

Deep in the Arctic north, drained peatlands—once massive carbon vaults built over thousands of years—are quietly leaking greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. But new field research from northern Norway suggests there’s a powerful way to slow that loss: raise the water level. In a two-year study, scientists found that restoring higher groundwater levels in cultivated Arctic peatlands dramatically cut carbon dioxide emissions, and in some cases even tipped the balance so the land absorbed more CO₂ than it released.

Science Dailyabout 11 hours ago
Flea and tick treatments for dogs and cats may be harming wildlife

Flea and tick medications trusted by pet owners worldwide may have an unexpected environmental cost. Scientists found that active ingredients from isoxazoline treatments pass into pet feces, exposing dung-feeding insects to toxic chemicals. These insects are essential for nutrient cycling and soil health. The findings suggest everyday pet treatments could ripple through ecosystems in surprising ways.

Science Dailyabout 13 hours ago
Frozen for 5,000 years, this ice cave bacterium resists modern antibiotics

Deep inside a Romanian ice cave, locked away in a 5,000-year-old layer of ice, scientists have uncovered a bacterium with a startling secret: it’s resistant to many modern antibiotics. Despite predating the antibiotic era, this cold-loving microbe carries more than 100 resistance-related genes and can survive drugs used today to treat serious infections like tuberculosis and UTIs.