Covalently Labeled Fluorescence–MRI Dual-Modal Polystyrene Microspheres for Imaging and Analysis of Microplastics in Biological Systems
Abstract
The widespread accumulation of microplastics (MPs) in the environment and their transfer along food chains pose growing threats to organismal health, but MPs’ in vivo behaviors remain poorly understood due to the lack of stable and sensitive imaging tools. Here, we report a robust covalent-labeling strategy for constructing dual-modal polystyrene microspheres (Fl-MRIPS) for fluorescent and magnetic imaging in biological samples. Two polymerizable functional monomers—a rhodamine dye (RhSt) for fluorescence imaging and a gadolinium complexe (DOTASt) for T1-weighted MRI were rationally designed and chemically incorporated into the polystyrene matrix via emulsion copolymerization. The resulting Fl-MRIPS exhibit precise size control, uniform morphology, excellent monodispersity, and high colloidal stability. The covalent anchoring minimizes dye and Gd leakage, while maintaining high fluorescence quantum yield, remarkable photostability, and strong MRI relaxivity. Fl-MRIPS show efficient cellular internalization with negligible cytotoxicity, enable high-contrast fluorescence visualization in zebrafish and mice, and provide significantly enhanced T1-weighted MRI contrast in mice subcutaneous tissue. This work establishes a generalizable, chemically stable dual-modal labeling platform for MPs, offering a powerful tool for elucidating their transport, biodistribution, and potential health risks in living organisms.
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