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Boosting nanotoxicity to combat multidrug-resistant bacteria in pathophysiological environments.

Dana WestmeierSvenja SiemerCecilia ValletJörg SteinmannDominic DocterJan BuerShirley K KnauerRoland H Stauber
Published in: Nanoscale advances (2020)
Nanomaterials are promising novel antibiotics, but often ineffective. We found that nanomaterial-bacteria complex formation occurred with various nanomaterials. The bactericidal activity of NMs strongly depends on their physical binding to (multidrug-resistant) bacteria. Nanomaterials' binding and antibiotic effect was reduced by various pathophysiological biomolecule coronas strongly inhibiting their antibiotic effects. We show from analytical to in vitro to in vivo that nanomaterial-based killing could be restored by acidic pH treatments. Here, complex formation of negatively-charged, plasma corona-covered, nanomaterials with bacteria was electrostatically enhanced by reducing bacteria's negative surface charge. Employing in vivo skin infection models, acidic pH-induced complex formation was critical to counteract Staphylococcus aureus infections by silver nanomaterials. We explain why nano-antibiotics show reduced activity and provide a clinically practical solution.
Keyphrases
  • multidrug resistant
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • drug resistant
  • gram negative
  • ionic liquid
  • mental health
  • signaling pathway
  • oxidative stress
  • drug induced
  • mass spectrometry
  • diabetic rats
  • transcription factor