Login / Signup

Antibacterial effects of in situ zinc oxide nanoparticles generated inside the poly (acrylamide-co-hydroxyethylmethacrylate) nanocomposite.

J Y Del C PereyraCesar Alfredo BarberoDiego F AcevedoEdith I Yslas
Published in: Nanotechnology (2022)
The present work reports the antibacterial activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa of a nanocomposite made of zinc oxide nanoparticles dispersed in a poly(acrylamide-co-hydroxyethylmethacrylate) matrix (PAAm-Hema-ZnONPs). The in situ synthesis of ZnONPs inside of the PAAm-Hema crosslinked network is described. Moreover, the physicochemical properties of the PAAm-Hema-ZnONPs nanocomposite are analyzed. The results confirm that the PAAm-Hema hydrogel provides an excellent scaffold to generate ZnONPs. The presence of ZnONPs inside the hydrogel was confirmed by UV-visible (band at 320 nm), by Infrared spectroscopy (peak at 470 cm -1 ), SEM, and TEM images. The presence of NPs in PAAm-Hema diminish the swelling percentage by 70%, and the Young modulus by 33.7%, compared with pristine hydrogel. The 75% of ZnONPs are released from the nanocomposite after 48 h of spontaneous diffusion, allowing the use of the nanocomposite as an antibacterial agent. In vitro , the agar diffusion test presents an inhibition halo against P. aeruginosa bacteria 50% higher than the unloaded hydrogel. Also, the PAAm-Hema-ZnONPs live/dead test shows 54% of dead cells more than the hydrogel. These results suggest that the easy, one-step way generated composites can be used in biomedical applications as antimicrobial agents.
Keyphrases