1. Assessment of potential toxicity of foodborne fluorescent nanoparticles from roasted pork
- Author
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Jing hua Lv, Mingqian Tan, Cao Lin, Shihui Shan, Li Jiaqi, and Xue Zhao
- Subjects
Male ,Biodistribution ,Swine ,Longevity ,Biomedical Engineering ,Administration, Oral ,Nanoparticle ,Food Contamination ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,Motor Activity ,010501 environmental sciences ,Toxicology ,01 natural sciences ,Fluorescence ,Mice ,Animals ,Cooking ,Caenorhabditis elegans ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Fluorescent nanoparticles ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Red Meat ,Blood-Brain Barrier ,Food processing ,Nanoparticles ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Potential toxicity - Abstract
Foodborne nanoparticles (NPs) refer to the nanostructures generated during food processing, rather than the man-made nano-structural additives that are added to improve the property of food. In this research, discovery of fluorescent NPs in roasted pork was reported at different temperature of 180, 230, and 280 °C. The size of the pork NPs was in the range of 5.93-7.49 nm. The FTIR and XPS analysis showed that the NPs are made up of graphitic carbon (sp2) and carbon defects (sp3), with abundant hydroxyl and carbonyl groups on the surface. The Ussing chamber test clearly showed the pork NPs had permeability passing through intestine. Significant fluorescence quenching of NPs was observed in the digestion
- Published
- 2019