Responsive Assembly of Silver Nanoclusters with a Biofilm Locally Amplified Bactericidal Effect to Enhance Treatments against Multi-Drug-Resistant Bacterial Infections
Author(s) -
Jiahe Wu,
Fangyuan Li,
Xi Hu,
Jingxiong Lu,
Xiaolian Sun,
Jianqing Gao,
Daishun Ling
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs central science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2374-7951
pISSN - 2374-7943
DOI - 10.1021/acscentsci.9b00359
Subject(s) - biofilm , nanoclusters , chemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , in vivo , in vitro , penetration (warfare) , biophysics , drug , bacteria , nanotechnology , biology , biochemistry , materials science , pharmacology , genetics , organic chemistry , operations research , engineering
Bacterial biofilms pose a major threat to public health because they are resistant to most current therapeutics. Conventional antibiotics exhibit limited penetration and weakened activity in the acidic microenvironment of a biofilm. Here, the development of biofilm-responsive nanoantibiotics (rAgNAs) composed of self-assembled silver nanoclusters and pH-sensitive charge reversal ligands, whose bactericidal activity can be selectively boosted in the biofilm microenvironment, is reported. Under neutral physiological conditions, the bactericidal activity of rAgNAs is self-quenched because the toxic silver ions' release is largely inhibited; however, upon entry into the acidic biofilm microenvironment, the rAgNAs not only exhibit charge reversal to facilitate local accumulation and retention but also disassemble into small silver nanoclusters, thus enabling deep penetration and accelerated silver ions release for dramatically amplified bactericidal activity. The superior antibiofilm activity of rAgNAs is demonstrated both in vitro and in vivo, and the mortality rate of mice with multi-drug-resistant biofilm-induced severe pyomyositis can be significantly reduced by rAgNAs treatment, indicating the immense potential of rAgNAs as highly efficient nanoscale antibacterial agents to combat resistant bacterial biofilm-associated infections.
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