Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843-3003, USA; Department of Chemistry, Chemical Biology and Biomedical Engineering, Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken 07030, NJ, USA.
Department of Chemistry, Chemical Biology and Biomedical Engineering, Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken 07030, NJ, USA.
Acta Biomater. 2017 Oct 1;61:66-74. doi: 10.1016/j.actbio.2017.08.012. Epub 2017 Aug 9.
Self-defensive antibiotic-loaded coatings have shown promise in inhibiting growth of pathogenic bacteria adhering to biomaterial implants and devices, but direct proof that their antibacterial release is triggered by bacterially-induced acidification of the immediate environment under buffered conditions remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate that Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli adhering to such coatings generate highly localized acidification, even in buffered conditions, to activate pH-triggered, self-defensive antibiotic release. To this end, we utilized chemically crosslinked layer-by-layer hydrogel coatings of poly(methacrylic acid) with a covalently attached pH-sensitive SNARF-1 fluorescent label for imaging, and unlabeled-antibiotic (gentamicin or polymyxin B) loaded coatings for antibacterial studies. Local acidification of the coatings induced by S. aureus and E. coli adhering to the coatings was demonstrated by confocal-laser-scanning-microscopy via wavelength-resolved imaging. pH-triggered antibiotic release under static, small volume conditions yielded high bacterial killing efficiencies for S. aureus and E. coli. Gentamicin-loaded films retained their antibacterial activity against S. aureus under fluid flow in buffered conditions. Antibacterial activity increased with the number of polymer layers in the films. Altogether, pH-triggered, self-defensive antibiotic-loaded coatings become activated by highly localized acidification in the immediate environment of an adhering bacterium, offering potential for clinical application with minimized side-effects.
Polymeric coatings were created that are able to uptake and selectively release antibiotics upon stimulus by adhering bacteria in order to understand the fundamental mechanisms behind pH-triggered antibiotic release as a potential way to prevent biomaterial-associated infections. Through fluorescent imaging studies, this work importantly shows that adhering bacteria produce highly localized pH changes even in buffer. Accordingly such coatings only demonstrate antibacterial activity by antibiotic release in the presence of adhering bacteria. This is clinically important, because ad libitum releasing antibiotic coatings usually show a burst release and have often lost their antibiotic content when bacteria adhere.
具有自我防御功能的载抗生素涂层在抑制附着在生物材料植入物和设备上的病原菌生长方面表现出巨大的潜力,但是,在缓冲条件下,其抗菌释放是由细菌诱导的局部环境酸化直接触发的,这一观点仍然难以得到证实。在这里,我们证明了即使在缓冲条件下,附着在这些涂层上的金黄色葡萄球菌和大肠杆菌也会产生高度局部酸化,从而激活 pH 触发的自我防御型抗生素释放。为此,我们利用化学交联层层水凝胶涂层,将聚(甲基丙烯酸)与共价附着的 pH 敏感 SNARF-1 荧光标记物结合使用进行成像,并将未标记的抗生素(庆大霉素或多粘菌素 B)负载在涂层上进行抗菌研究。通过共聚焦激光扫描显微镜通过波长分辨成像,证明了 S. aureus 和 E. coli 附着在涂层上时对涂层的局部酸化。在静态、小体积条件下,pH 触发的抗生素释放对 S. aureus 和 E. coli 具有很高的杀菌效率。在缓冲条件下,庆大霉素负载的薄膜在流体流动下仍保持对 S. aureus 的抗菌活性。抗菌活性随薄膜中聚合物层数的增加而增加。总之,局部酸化可激活 pH 触发的自我防御型载抗生素涂层,从而为临床应用提供了一种潜在的方法,同时将副作用最小化。
为了了解 pH 触发型抗生素释放作为预防生物材料相关感染的潜在方法的基本机制,我们创建了能够在附着细菌刺激下吸收和选择性释放抗生素的聚合物涂层。通过荧光成像研究,这项工作重要地表明,即使在缓冲液中,附着的细菌也会产生高度局部的 pH 变化。因此,只有在存在附着细菌的情况下,这些涂层才会通过抗生素释放显示出抗菌活性。这在临床上很重要,因为随意释放抗生素的涂层通常会显示出爆发式释放,并且当细菌附着时,通常会失去抗生素含量。