Department of Chemical Engineering, McGill University, 3610 University St., Montreal, QC H3A 0C5, Canada; Department of Chemistry, McGill University, 801 Sherbrooke St. West, Montreal, QC H3A 0B8, Canada.
Department of Chemistry, McGill University, 801 Sherbrooke St. West, Montreal, QC H3A 0B8, Canada.
Adv Colloid Interface Sci. 2018 Feb;252:55-68. doi: 10.1016/j.cis.2017.12.007. Epub 2017 Dec 24.
Over the past ten years, a next-generation approach to combat bacterial contamination has emerged: one which employs nanostructure geometry to deliver lethal mechanical forces causing bacterial cell death. In this review, we first discuss advances in both colloidal and topographical nanostructures shown to exhibit such "mechano-bactericidal" mechanisms of action. Next, we highlight work from pioneering research groups in this area of antibacterials. Finally, we provide suggestions for unexplored research topics that would benefit the field of mechano-bactericidal nanostructures. Traditionally, antibacterial materials are loaded with antibacterial agents with the expectation that these agents will be released in a timely fashion to reach their intended bacterial metabolic target at a sufficient concentration. Such antibacterial approaches, generally categorized as chemical-based, face design drawbacks as compounds diffuse in all directions, leach into the environment, and require replenishing. In contrast, due to their mechanisms of action, mechano-bactericidal nanostructures can benefit from sustainable opportunities. Namely, mechano-bactericidal efficacy needs not replenishing since they are not consumed metabolically, nor are they designed to release or leach compounds. For this same reason, however, their action is limited to the bacterial cells that have made direct contact with mechano-bactericidal nanostructures. As suspended colloids, mechano-bactericidal nanostructures such as carbon nanotubes and graphene nanosheets can pierce or slice bacterial membranes. Alternatively, surface topography such as mechano-bactericidal nanopillars and nanospikes can inflict critical membrane damage to microorganisms perched upon them, leading to subsequent cell lysis and death. Despite the infancy of this area of research, materials constructed from these nanostructures show remarkable antibacterial potential worthy of further investigation.
在过去的十年中,出现了一种针对细菌污染的下一代方法:利用纳米结构几何形状来传递致命的机械力,从而导致细菌细胞死亡。在这篇综述中,我们首先讨论了胶体和形貌纳米结构的进展,这些结构表现出了这种“机械杀菌”作用机制。接下来,我们重点介绍了该抗菌领域的先驱研究小组的工作。最后,我们提出了一些尚未探索的研究课题建议,这些课题将有益于机械杀菌纳米结构领域。传统上,抗菌材料负载有抗菌剂,期望这些抗菌剂能够及时释放,以达到其预期的细菌代谢靶标,并达到足够的浓度。这种抗菌方法通常被归类为基于化学的方法,面临着设计上的缺陷,因为化合物会向各个方向扩散,浸出到环境中,并且需要补充。相比之下,由于其作用机制,机械杀菌纳米结构可以从可持续的机会中受益。也就是说,机械杀菌功效不需要补充,因为它们不会被代谢消耗,也不会被设计为释放或浸出化合物。然而,出于同样的原因,它们的作用仅限于直接与机械杀菌纳米结构接触的细菌细胞。作为悬浮胶体,机械杀菌纳米结构(如碳纳米管和石墨烯纳米片)可以刺穿或切割细菌膜。或者,表面形貌(如机械杀菌纳米柱和纳米刺)可以对栖息在其上的微生物造成关键的膜损伤,导致随后的细胞裂解和死亡。尽管这一研究领域还处于起步阶段,但由这些纳米结构构建的材料显示出了显著的抗菌潜力,值得进一步研究。