Nanocomposite antimicrobials prevent bacterial growth through the enzyme-like activity of Bi-doped cerium dioxide (Ce1-xBixO2-δ).
Hajo FrerichsEva PützFelix PfitznerTobias ReichAthanasios GazanisMartin PanthöferJens HartmannOlga JegelRalf HeermannWolfgang TremelPublished in: Nanoscale (2021)
Preventing bacterial adhesion on materials surfaces is an important problem in marine, industrial, medical and environmental fields and a topic of major medical and societal importance. A defense strategy of marine organisms against bacterial colonization relies on the biohalogenation of signaling compounds that interfere with bacterial communication. These reactions are catalyzed by haloperoxidases, a class of metal-dependent enzymes, whose activity can be emulated by ceria nanoparticles. The enzyme-like activity of ceria was enhanced by a factor of 3 through bismuth substitution (Ce1-xBixO2-δ). The solubility of Bi3+ in CeO2 is confined to the range 0 < x < 0.25 under quasi-hydrothermal conditions. The Bi3+ cations are located close to the nanoparticle surface because their ionic radii are larger than those of the tetravalent Ce4+ ions. The synthesis of Ce1-xBixO2-δ (0 < x < 0.25) nanoparticles was upscaled to yields of ∼50 g. The halogenation activity of Ce1-xBixO2-δ was demonstrated with phenol red assays. The maximum activity for x ≈ 0.2 is related to the interplay of the ζ-potential of surface-engineered Ce1-xBixO2-δ nanoparticles and their BET surface area. Ce0.80Bi0.20O1.9 nanoparticles with optimized activity were incorporated in polyethersulfone beads, which are typical constituents of water filter membrane supports. Although Ce1-xBixO2-δ nanoparticles are not bactericidal on their own, naked Ce1-xBixO2-δ nanoparticles and polyethersulfone/Ce1-xBixO2-δ nanocomposites showed a strongly reduced bacterial coverage. We attribute the decreased adhesion of the Gram-negative soil bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa and of Phaeobacter gallaeciensis, a primary bacterial colonizer in marine biofilms, to the formation of halogenated signaling compounds. No biocides are needed, H2O2 (formed in daylight) and halide are the only substrates required. The haloperoxidase-like activity of Ce1-xBixO2-δ may be a promising starting point for the development of environmentally friendly, "green" nanocomposites, when the use of conventional biocides is prohibited.