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AI Body Mapping Reveals Hidden Obesity-Linked Damage to Facial Nerves, Study Finds - Video
Overview
Obesity may be damaging the body in ways scientists never realized - right down to the nerves in the face. Using a powerful new artificial intelligence system, researchers have mapped disease-related changes across an entire mouse body and uncovered previously hidden nerve damage linked to obesity.
The breakthrough study, published in Nature, was led by scientists at Helmholtz Munich and Ludwig Maximilians University Munich. Their new AI platform, called MouseMapper, can analyze whole-body scans at cellular-level detail, allowing researchers to study how diseases affect multiple organs and tissues simultaneously.
To create these detailed maps, scientists made mice transparent using special tissue-clearing techniques while preserving fluorescent markers attached to nerves and immune cells. Advanced light-sheet microscopes then captured three-dimensional images of the entire body, producing enormous datasets containing millions of cellular structures.
MouseMapper analyzed the scans automatically, identifying 31 different organs and tissue types while tracking nerve networks and inflammation throughout the body.
When researchers used the system to study obesity, they discovered widespread immune changes and unexpected nerve damage. One of the most surprising findings involved the trigeminal nerve, a major facial nerve responsible for sensation and some motor functions.
In obese mice, these facial nerves had fewer branches and damaged nerve endings, suggesting impaired nerve function. Behavioral tests supported the discovery, showing that obese mice were less sensitive to touch and sensory stimulation compared with lean mice.
Scientists also found inflammation-related molecular changes inside the trigeminal ganglion, the cluster of nerve cells connected to facial sensation. Importantly, many of the same molecular patterns were later identified in human tissue from people with obesity, suggesting similar nerve damage could occur in humans as well.
The team believes MouseMapper could become a major tool for studying complex diseases such as diabetes, cancer, and neurodegenerative disorders. By creating detailed “digital twins” of organisms, scientists hope future AI systems may help detect diseases earlier, test treatments virtually, and reduce the need for animal experiments.
REFERENCE: Doris Kaltenecker, Izabela Horvath, et al.; A deep-learning framework reveals whole-body perturbations at cell level. Nature, 2026; DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10535-2


