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Metallic Gallium Droplets Exhibit Poor Antibacterial Properties.

Michelle LeongCaiden J ParkerZ L ShawLouisa Z Y HuangDavid R NisbetTorben DaenekeAaron James ElbourneSamuel Cheeseman
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
The rise of antibiotic resistance in pathogenic bacteria requires new therapeutics to be developed. Several metallic nanoparticles such as those made from silver, copper, and zinc have shown significant antibacterial activity, in part due to metal ion leaching. Ga 3+ containing compounds have also been shown to have antibacterial properties. Accordingly, it is estimated that metallic Ga droplets may be antibacterial, and some studies to date have confirmed this. Here, multiple concentrations of Ga droplets were tested against the antibiotic resistant Gram-positive bacteria methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and the Gram-negative bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa (P. aeruginosa) Despite a high concentration (2 mg/mL), Ga droplets had only modest antibacterial activity against both bacteria after 24 h of interaction. Finally, we demonstrated that Ga droplets were easily functionalized through a galvanic replacement reaction to develop antibacterial particles with copper and silver demonstrating a total detectable reduction of MRSA and >96% reduction of P. aeruginosa . Altogether, these results contradict previous literature and show that Ga droplets demonstrate no antibacterial activity at concentrations comparable to those of conventional antibiotics and well-established antibacterial nanomaterials and only modest antibacterial activity at very high concentrations. However, we demonstrate that their antibacterial activity can be easily enhanced by functionalization.
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