Department of Nanoscience & Biomedical Engineering, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, Rapid City, SD, USA.
Department of Biology, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, USA.
Metallomics. 2023 Mar 6;15(3). doi: 10.1093/mtomcs/mfad011.
The increased use of antimicrobial compounds such as copper into nanoparticles changes how living cells interact with these novel materials. The increased use of antimicrobial nanomaterials combats infectious disease and food spoilage. Fungal infections are particularly difficult to treat because of the few druggable targets, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae provides an insightful model organism to test these new materials. However, because of the novel characteristics of these materials, it is unclear how these materials interact with living cells and if resistance to copper-based nanomaterials could occur. Copper nanoparticles built on carboxymethylcellulose microfibril strands with copper (CMC-Cu) are a promising nanomaterial when imported into yeast cells and induce cell death. The α-arrestins are cargo adaptors that select which molecules are imported into eukaryotic cells. We screened α-arrestins mutants and identified Aly2, Rim8, and Rog3 α-arrestins, which are necessary for the internalization of CMC-Cu nanoparticles. Internal reactive oxygen species in these mutants were lower and corresponded to the increased viability in the presence of CMC-Cu. Using lattice light-sheet microscopy on live cells, we determined that CMC-Cu were imported into yeast within 30 min of exposure. Initially, the cytoplasmic pH decreased but returned to basal level 90 min later. However, there was heterogeneity in response to CMC-Cu exposure, which could be due to the heterogeneity of the particles or differences in the metabolic states within the population. When yeast were exposed to sublethal concentrations of CMC-Cu no resistance occurred. Internalization of CMC-Cu increases the potency of these antimicrobial nanomaterials and is likely key to preventing fungi from evolving resistance.
抗菌化合物(如铜)纳米颗粒的大量使用改变了活细胞与这些新型材料的相互作用方式。抗菌纳米材料的大量使用可对抗传染病和食物腐败。真菌感染尤其难以治疗,因为可供药物作用的靶点很少,而酿酒酵母(Saccharomyces cerevisiae)为测试这些新材料提供了一个有洞察力的模式生物。然而,由于这些材料具有新颖的特性,尚不清楚这些材料如何与活细胞相互作用,以及是否会对基于铜的纳米材料产生耐药性。基于羧甲基纤维素微纤维链的铜纳米颗粒(CMC-Cu)在被导入酵母细胞时是一种很有前途的纳米材料,可诱导细胞死亡。α-arrestins 是货物衔接蛋白,可选择哪些分子被导入真核细胞。我们筛选了α-arrestins 突变体,并鉴定出 Aly2、Rim8 和 Rog3α-arrestins 是内吞 CMC-Cu 纳米颗粒所必需的。这些突变体中的细胞内活性氧(ROS)水平较低,并且在存在 CMC-Cu 的情况下细胞活力增加。我们通过活细胞晶格光片显微镜确定 CMC-Cu 在暴露于细胞后 30 分钟内被导入酵母细胞内。最初,细胞质 pH 值下降,但 90 分钟后恢复到基础水平。然而,对 CMC-Cu 暴露的反应存在异质性,这可能是由于颗粒的异质性或群体内代谢状态的差异。当酵母暴露于亚致死浓度的 CMC-Cu 时,不会产生耐药性。CMC-Cu 的内化增加了这些抗菌纳米材料的效力,这可能是防止真菌产生耐药性的关键。