Ultrasound-Induced Abiotic and Biotic Interfacial Electron Transfer for Efficient Treatment of Bacterial Infection.
Yi YuYuxuan ZengQunle OuyangXiangmei LiuYufeng ZhengShui-Lin WuXiangmei LiuPublished in: ACS nano (2023)
Electron transfer plays an important role in various catalytic reactions and physiological activities, whose altered processes may change catalytic efficiency and interfere in physiological metabolic processes. In this study, we design an ultrasound (US)-activated piezoelectric responsive heterojunction (PCN-222-BTO, PCN: porous coordination network), which can change the electron transfer path at the abiotic and abiotic-biotic interfaces under US, thus achieving a rapid (15 min) and efficient bactericidal effect of 99.96%. US-induced polarization of BTO generates a built-in electric field, which promotes the electron transfer excited from PCN-222 to BTO at the PCN-222-BTO interface, thereby increasing the level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Especially, we find that the biological electron transfer from the bacterial membrane to BTO is also activated at the MRSA-BTO interface. This antibacterial mode results in the down-regulated ribosomal, DNA and ATP synthesis related genes in MRSA, while the cell membrane and ion transport related genes are up-regulated due to the synergistic damage effect of ROS and disturbance of the bacterial electron transport chain. This US responsive dual-interface system shows an excellent therapeutic effect for the treatment of the MRSA-infected osteomyelitis model, which is superior to clinical vancomycin therapy.
Keyphrases
- electron transfer
- methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus
- reactive oxygen species
- staphylococcus aureus
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cancer therapy
- high glucose
- cell death
- dna damage
- drug induced
- circulating tumor
- combination therapy
- cell free
- quantum dots
- ionic liquid
- crystal structure
- smoking cessation
- highly efficient
- circulating tumor cells
- stress induced
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- plant growth