Login / Signup

Bovine Serum Albumin Amplified Reactive Oxygen Species Generation from Anthrarufin-Derived Carbon Dot and Concomitant Nanoassembly for Combination Antibiotic-Photodynamic Therapy Application.

Saptarshi MandalSurendra Rajit PrasadDebabrata MandalProlay Das
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2019)
Amplification of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation through covalent conjugation of bovine serum albumin (BSA) with newly synthesized, ROS-producing carbon dots (CDs) upon visible light irradiation is reported for the first time. Derivatization of surface carboxyl functional groups of Anthrarufin-derived, green-emitting CD with the amine functionality of BSA ushers distinct changes in the photophysics of CD including an unprecedented ∼50 nm shift in its excitation maxima, decrease in fluorescence lifetime, and concomitant increase in ROS generation. Substantial conformational changes of BSA were witnessed upon conjugation with CD, rendering the BSA-CD conjugate resistant to pepsinolysis. A protease-proof nanoassembly was derived from the BSA-CD conjugate through desolvation that simultaneously hosts a prototype antibiotic and generates ROS with excellent efficiency, making it an attractive platform for antibacterial photodynamic therapy (A-PDT) applications. Systemic annihilation of both Gram-positive and -negative bacteria was achieved with the BSA-CD nanoassembly and envisioned as alternatives to traditional photosensitizers.
Keyphrases