Abstract

Nanoplastics have attracted significant attention due to their harmful effects on the environment and organisms. However, accurately detecting and quantifying nanoplastics that are ingested by organisms poses a challenge. Conventional organic fluorescent-labeled nanoplastics have reduced labeling efficiency due to aggregation-caused quenching (ACQ), leading to artifacts caused by leakage of fluorescent molecules. To address these limitations, this study utilized AIE fluorescence for internally labeling polystyrene nanoparticles. AIE-active molecules do not emit fluorescence in dilute solutions, thus preventing accuracy issues associated with fluorescence leakage. Three model plastics (TPE@PS) of varying particle sizes were synthesized via the swelling method. The preparation parameters were optimized, followed by stability tests conducted on TPE@PS. Fluorescence microscopy imaging revealed significant uptake of TPE@PS by RAW246.7 cells. A successful standard curve of fluorescence intensity-concentration was established successfully and utilized to accurately quantify the amount of TPE@PS that was ingested by RAW246.7 cells. The results indicate a consistent increase with increasing concentration in TPE@PS uptake across all particle sizes during the fixed exposure duration of 48 h. Furthermore, RAW264.7 cells exhibited a higher propensity to uptake smaller TPE@PS particles. Flow cytometry was also employed to validated the suitability of TPE@PS as a model nanoplastic for tracing purposes.

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