| Literature DB >> 29341609 |
Jing-Min Liu1, Zhi-Hao Wang1, Hui Ma1, Shuo Wang1.
Abstract
Development of real-time and in situ analytical methods for determination of food-borne pathogens and toxins ingested into the human body would be a promising research direction in the food-safety area. The present perspective starts with summarization of the up-to-date progress of the nanomaterial-assisted in vitro detection methods for pathogens and toxins and finally focuses on application of animal bioimaging to in vivo study, including prospective strategies for in vivo quantification of target pathogens or toxins and in vivo investigation of their behaviors inside the living body, with the assistance of real-time and non-invasive optical bioimaging. This perspective provides the advisory direction for food-safety research, from in vitro to in vivo, along with a prospective discussion of the further development roadmap of the food-safety detection techniques, especially the bioimaging-guided methods for investigation and mediation of the food contamination effect to human health.Entities:
Keywords: bioimaging; food-borne toxins; in vivo detection; nanomaterials; pathogens
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29341609 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.7b05225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279