Illustration
of skin tissues rendered transparent following saturation by FD & C Yellow
5. Credit: Keyi "Onyx" Li/U.S. National Science Foundation
Researchers
have developed a new way to see organs within a body by rendering overlying
tissues transparent to visible light. The counterintuitive process—a topical
application of food-safe dye—was reversible in tests with animal subjects, and
may ultimately apply to a wide range of medical diagnostics, from locating
injuries to monitoring digestive disorders to identifying cancers.
Stanford University researchers
published the research, titled
"Achieving optical transparency in live animals with absorbing molecules,"
in the Sept. 6, 2024, issue of Science.
"Looking forward, this technology
could make veins more visible for the drawing of blood, make laser-based tattoo
removal more straightforward, or assist in the early detection and treatment of
cancers," said Stanford University assistant professor of materials
science and engineering Guosong Hong, who helped lead this work.
"For example, certain therapies use lasers to eliminate cancerous and precancerous cells, but are limited to areas near the skin's surface. This technique may be able to improve that light penetration."
Animation depicting the tissue transparency
effect and how it might appear if tested with humans in the future. The latter
part of the animation shows how photons interact with tissues at the cellular
level, both with and without FD & C Yellow 5 saturation. Credit: Keyi
"Onyx" Li/U.S. National Science Foundation
An illuminating solution
To master the new technique, the
researchers developed a way to predict how light interacts with dyed biological
tissues.
Those predictions required a deep
understanding of light scattering, as well as the process of refraction, where
light changes speed and bends as it travels from one material into another.
Scattering is the reason we cannot
see through our body: Fats, fluids within cells, proteins, and other materials
each have a different refractive index, a property that dictates how
significantly an incoming light wave will bend.
In most tissues, those materials
are closely compacted together, so the varied refractive indices cause light to
scatter as it passes through. It is the scattering effect that our eyes
interpret as opaque, colored, biological materials.
The researchers realized if they
wanted to make biological material transparent, they had to find a way to match
the different refractive indices so light could travel through unimpeded.
Building upon fundamental insights
from the field of optics, the researchers realized dyes that are the most
effective at absorbing light can also be highly effective at directing light
uniformly through a wide range of refractive indices.
One dye the researchers predicted would be particularly effective was tartrazine, the food dye more commonly known as FD & C Yellow 5. It turns out, they were correct: when dissolved into water and absorbed into tissues, tartrazine molecules are perfectly structured to match refractive indices and prevent light from scattering, resulting in transparency.
Close-up video of syringe-injected solution of FD
& C Yellow 5 dye in an orange container filled with water. Credit: Matthew
Christiansen/U.S. National Science Foundation
The researchers first tested their
predictions with thin slices of chicken breast. As tartrazine concentrations
increased, the refractive index of the fluid within the muscle cells rose until
it matched the refractive index of the muscle proteins—the slice became
transparent.
Then, the researchers gently rubbed
a temporary tartrazine solution on mice. First, they applied the solution to
the scalp, rendering the skin transparent to reveal blood vessels crisscrossing
the brain. Next, they applied the solution to the abdomen, which faded within
minutes to show contractions of the intestine and movements caused by
heartbeats and breathing.
The technique resolved features at
the scale of microns, and even enhanced microscope observations. When the dye
was rinsed off, the tissues quickly returned to normal opacity. The tartrazine
did not appear to have long-term effects, and any excess was excreted in waste
within 48 hours.
The researchers suspect that injecting the dye should lead to even deeper views within organisms, with implications for both biology and medicine.
Time-lapse
images of blood vessels in the brain just beneath the skull of a sedated mouse,
revealed without any surgery, incisions, or damaging the mouse's bone or skin.
By reversibly dyeing the tissues with FD & C Yellow 5 and using a technique
called laser speckle contrast imaging, Stanford University researchers observed
the blood flow within this living brain. Credit: Stanford University/Gail
Rupert/USNSF
Old formulas yield new window into medicine
The project began as an
investigation into how microwave radiation interacts with biological tissues.
In exploring optics textbooks from
the 1970s and 1980s, the researchers found two key concepts: mathematical
equations called Kramers-Kronig relations and a phenomenon called Lorentz
oscillation, where electrons and atoms resonate within molecules as photons
pass through.
Well studied for more than a
century, yet not applied to medicine in this way, the tools proved ideal for
predicting how a given dye can raise the refractive index of biological fluids
to perfectly match surrounding fats and proteins.
Graduate researcher Nick Rommelfanger, working under an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship, was one of the first to realize that the same modifications that make materials transparent to microwaves could be tailored to impact the visible spectrum, with potential applications in medicine.
Close-up
image of a gloved hand scooping undissolved FD & C Yellow 5 dye from a
glass jar. Credit: Matthew Christiansen/U.S. National Science Foundation
A molecule among many
Transitioning from theory to
experimentation, postdoctoral researcher Zihao Ou—the study's lead
author—ordered a number of strong dyes and began the process of meticulously
evaluating each for ideal optical properties.
Ultimately, the team grew to 21
students, collaborators, and advisors, involving several analytical systems.
One that proved critical was a
decades-old ellipsometer nestled among newer equipment at the Stanford Nano
Shared Facilities, part of the NSF National Nanotechnology Coordinated
Infrastructure (NNCI).
The ellipsometer is a tool familiar
to semiconductor manufacturing, not biology. However, in a possible first for
medicine, the researchers realized it was perfect to predict the optical
properties of their target dyes.
"Advanced research facilities
constantly aim to strike the right balance by providing access to basic tools
and expertise while making space for newer, larger, and more powerful
instrumentation," said NSF Program Officer Richard Nash, who oversees the
NSF NNCI.
"While a basic workhorse such
as an ellipsometer would rarely make headlines, it nevertheless can play a
crucial role when deployed for atypical uses like the case here. Open access to
such instrumentation is foundational for making groundbreaking discoveries, as
those instruments can be deployed in new ways to generate fundamental insights
about scientific phenomena."
With methods grounded in
fundamental physics, the researchers hope their approach will launch a new
field of study matching dyes to biological tissues based on optical properties,
potentially leading to a wide range of medical applications.
"As an optics person, I'm
amazed at how they got so much from exploiting the Kramers-Konig
relationship," said NSF Program Officer Adam Wax, who has supported Hong's
work.
"Every optics student learns about them, but this team has used the equations to figure out how a strongly absorbing dye can make skin transparent. ... Hong was able to step out in a bold new direction, a great example of how fundamental optics knowledge can be used to create new technologies, including in biomedicine."
by National Science Foundation
Source: A window into the body: New technique makes skin invisible (phys.org)
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