Gagnon J, Clift M J D, Vanhecke D, Widnersson I E, Abram S-L, Petri-Fink A, Caruso R A, Rothen-Rutishauser B, Fromm K M
Department of Chemistry and Fribourg Center for Nanomaterials, University of Fribourg, Chemin du Musée 9, 1700 Fribourg, Switzerland.
J Mater Chem B. 2016 Feb 14;4(6):1166-1174. doi: 10.1039/c5tb01917f. Epub 2016 Jan 14.
Biomaterials as implants are being applied more extensively in medicine due to their on-going development and associated improvements, and the increase in human life expectancy. Nonetheless, biomaterial-related infections, as well as propagating bacterial resistance, remain significant issues. Therefore, there is a growing interest for silver-based drugs because of their efficient and broad-range antimicrobial activity and low toxicity to humans. Most newly-developed silver-based drugs have an extremely fast silver-ion release, increasing adverse biological impact to the surrounding tissue and achieving only short-term antimicrobial activity. Nanoencapsulation of these drugs is hypothesized as beneficial for controlling silver release, and thus is the aim of the present study. Initially, an amorphous or crystalline (anatase) titania (TiO) coating was synthesized around silver nanoparticle-containing (AgNP) ceria (CeO) nanocontainers using a sonication method forming AgNP/CeO/TiO nanocontainers. These nanocontainers were characterized by high-resolution transmission electron microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, powder X-ray diffraction, gas sorption experiments and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. Silver release, monitored by using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy, showed that these containers prevented silver release in water at neutral pH, and released the silver in concentrated nitric acid solution (pH = 1.1). The AgNP/CeO/TiO nanocontainers showed an antibacterial activity against E. coli, however a concentration-dependent cytotoxicity towards a model epithelial barrier cell type (A549 cells) was observed. These nanocontainers offer the concept of potentially controlling silver delivery for the prevention of implant-associated infections.
随着生物材料作为植入物的不断发展及其相关性能的改善,以及人类预期寿命的延长,它们在医学领域的应用越来越广泛。尽管如此,生物材料相关感染以及细菌耐药性的传播仍然是重大问题。因此,由于银基药物具有高效、广谱的抗菌活性且对人体毒性低,人们对其的兴趣与日俱增。大多数新开发的银基药物银离子释放极快,增加了对周围组织的不良生物学影响,且仅具有短期抗菌活性。这些药物的纳米封装被认为有利于控制银的释放,因此是本研究的目标。最初,使用超声处理方法在含银纳米颗粒(AgNP)的二氧化铈(CeO)纳米容器周围合成了无定形或结晶(锐钛矿)二氧化钛(TiO)涂层,形成AgNP/CeO/TiO纳米容器。这些纳米容器通过高分辨率透射电子显微镜、扫描电子显微镜、粉末X射线衍射、气体吸附实验和能量色散X射线光谱进行表征。通过电感耦合等离子体发射光谱监测银的释放,结果表明这些容器在中性pH的水中可防止银释放,而在浓硝酸溶液(pH = 1.1)中释放银。AgNP/CeO/TiO纳米容器对大肠杆菌表现出抗菌活性,然而,观察到其对一种模型上皮屏障细胞类型(A549细胞)具有浓度依赖性细胞毒性。这些纳米容器为潜在控制银的递送以预防植入物相关感染提供了概念。