1Institute for Ultrafast Spectroscopy and Lasers (United States) 2Southern Connecticut State Univ. (United States) 3Univ. of California, San Diego (United States) 4The City Univ. of New York (United States) 5Borough of Manhattan Community College (United States)
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The unique advantage of visible resonance Raman (VRR) spectroscopy using 532 nm excitation wavelength for biological samples is the resonance enhancement of vibrational modes of chemical bonds from cells and tissues. The aim of this study is specifically to reveal the VRR characteristic spectra of different organs in mice, find the molecular alterations in the development of white matter and gray matter of mouse embryos at different ages and study the VRR spectral information of the mouse embryo head using VRR technology.
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Zhe Pei, Binlin Wu, Lingyan Shi, Lin Zhang, Susie Boydston-White, Cheng-Hui Liu, Robert R. Alfano, "Visible resonance Raman spectroscopic ex vivo studies of mouse brain and organs," Proc. SPIE 11954, Optical Biopsy XX: Toward Real-Time Spectroscopic Imaging and Diagnosis, 1195402 (2 March 2022); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2609810