Synthesis and Spectral Characterisation of Fabricated Cerium-Doped Magnesium Oxide Nanoparticles: Evaluation of the Antimicrobial Potential and Its Membranolytic Activity through Large Unilamellar Vesicles.
Ashapurna KhatuaKajal KumariDeepak KhatakAnnesha RoyNeelima BhattBernard PaulAparupa NaikAmiya Kumar PatelUttam Kumar PanigrahiSantosh Kumar SahuMuthupandian SaravananRamovatar MeenaPublished in: Journal of functional biomaterials (2023)
Considerable attention has been given to Magnesium oxide nanoparticles lately due to their antimicrobial potential, low toxicity to humans, high thermal stability, biocompatibility, and low cost of production. However, their successful transformation into sustainable drugs is limited due to their low membrane permeability, which reduces their bioavailability in target cells. Herein we propose Cerium-doped magnesium oxide nanoparticles (MgOCeNPs) as a powerful solution to above mentioned limitations and are compared with MgO NPs for their membrane permeability and antimicrobial activity. Both pure and Ce-doped were characterized by various spectroscopic and microscopic techniques, in which an X-ray diffraction (XRD) examination reveals the lattice patterns for doped nanoparticles. Furthermore, Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) revealed the three-dimensional (3D) structure and height of the nanoparticle. The crystal structure (FCC) of MgO did not change with Ce doping. However, microstructural properties like lattice parameter, crystallite size and biological activity of MgO significantly changed with Ce doping. In order to evaluate the antimicrobial potential of MgOCeNPs in comparison to MgO NPs and to understand the underlying mechanisms, the antibacterial activity was investigated against human pathogenic bacteria E. coli and P. aeruginosa, and antifungal activity against THY-1, a fungal strain. MgOCeNPs were studied by several methods, which resulted in a strong antibacterial and antifungal activity in the form of an elevated zone of inhibition, reduced growth curve, lower minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC 80 ) and enhanced cytotoxicity in both bacterial and fungal strain as compared to MgO nanoparticles. The study of the growth curve showed early and prolonged stationary phase and early decline log phase. Both bacterial and fungal strains showed dose-dependent cytotoxicity with enhancement in intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and formation of pores in the membrane when interacting with egg-phosphatidylcholine model Large Unilamellar Vesicles (LUVs). The proposed mechanism of MgOCeNPs toxicity evidently is membranolytic activity and induction of ROS production, which may cause oxidative stress-mediated cytotoxicity. These results confirmed that MgOCeNPs are a novel and very potent antimicrobial agent with a great promise of controlling and treating other microbes.
Keyphrases
- oxide nanoparticles
- atomic force microscopy
- reactive oxygen species
- quantum dots
- crystal structure
- staphylococcus aureus
- endothelial cells
- low cost
- oxidative stress
- highly efficient
- induced apoptosis
- high speed
- escherichia coli
- dna damage
- energy transfer
- metal organic framework
- visible light
- single molecule
- working memory
- cell cycle arrest
- body mass index
- cell wall
- optical coherence tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- white matter
- signaling pathway
- big data
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- deep learning
- clinical evaluation
- contrast enhanced