Carbon Nanofibers in Pure Form and in Calcium Alginate Composites Films: New Cost-Effective Antibacterial Biomaterials against the Life-Threatening Multidrug-Resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis.
Beatriz SalesaMiguel MartíBelén FrígolsÃngel Serrano-ArocaPublished in: Polymers (2019)
Due to the current global health problem of antibiotic resistant recently announced by the World Health Organization, there is an urgent necessity of looking for new alternative antibacterial materials able to treat and impede multidrug-resistant infections which are cost-effective and non-toxic for human beings. In this regard, carbon nanofibers (CNFs) possess currently much lower cost than other carbon nanomaterials, such as graphene oxide, and exhibit excellent chemical, mechanical and electric properties. Furthermore, here, the first report on the antibacterial activity of CNFs was demonstrated. Thus, these nanomaterials, in pure form or incorporated in a minuscule amount into calcium alginate composite films to reduce production costs as much as possible, showed to be new weapons against a globally spreading multidrug-resistant pathogen, the methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis (MRSE). This Gram-positive bacterium is becoming one of the most dangerous pathogens, due to its abundance on skin. In this study, these hollow filamentous materials, in direct contact with cells and loaded in the low-cost calcium alginate composite films, showed no cytotoxicity for human keratinocyte HaCaT cells, which render them very promising for biomedical applications. The CNFs used in this work were characterized by Raman spectroscopy and observed by high-resolution transmission electron with energy-disperse X-ray spectroscopy.
Keyphrases
- multidrug resistant
- gram negative
- high resolution
- wound healing
- biofilm formation
- staphylococcus aureus
- induced apoptosis
- drug resistant
- endothelial cells
- acinetobacter baumannii
- global health
- raman spectroscopy
- cell cycle arrest
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- room temperature
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- silver nanoparticles
- tissue engineering
- public health
- candida albicans
- pluripotent stem cells
- drug delivery
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- mass spectrometry
- signaling pathway
- cell death
- magnetic resonance
- antimicrobial resistance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- electron microscopy
- cell proliferation
- electron transfer
- reduced graphene oxide
- bone regeneration