Department of Public Health, Brody School of Medicine, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC, USA.
Department of Public Health, Brody School of Medicine, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2024 May 15;925:171675. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.171675. Epub 2024 Mar 12.
Globally rising antibiotic-resistant (AR) and multi-drug resistant (MDR) bacterial infections are of public health concern due to treatment failure with current antibiotics. Enterobacteria, particularly Escherichia coli, cause infections of surgical wound, bloodstream, and urinary tract, including pneumonia and sepsis. Herein, we tested in vitro antibacterial efficacy, mode of action (MoA), and safety of novel amino-functionalized silver nanoparticles (NH-AgNP) against the AR bacteria. Two AR E. coli strains (i.e., ampicillin- and kanamycin-resistant E. coli), including a susceptible strain of E. coli DH5α, were tested for susceptibility to NH-AgNP using Kirby-Bauer disk diffusion and standard growth assays. Dynamic light scattering (DLS) was used to determine cell debris and relative conductance was used as a measure of cell leakage, and results were confirmed with transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Multiple oxidative stress assays were used for in vitro safety evaluation of NH-AgNP in human lung epithelial cells. Results showed that ampicillin and kanamycin did not inhibit growth in either AR bacterial strain with doses up to 160 μg/mL tested. NH-AgNP exhibited broad-spectrum bactericidal activity, inhibiting the growth of all three bacterial strains at doses ≥1 μg/mL. DLS and TEM revealed cell debris formation and cell leakage upon NH-AgNP treatment, suggesting two possible MoAs: electrostatic interactions followed by cell wall damage. Safety evaluation revealed NH-AgNP as noncytotoxic and antioxidative to human lung epithelial cells. Taken together, these results suggest that NH-AgNP may serve as an effective and safer bactericidal therapy against AR bacterial infections compared to common antibiotics.
全球范围内,抗生素耐药性(AR)和多药耐药性(MDR)细菌感染日益增多,由于目前抗生素治疗失败,引起了公众健康的关注。肠杆菌科,尤其是大肠杆菌,会引起手术伤口、血液和尿路(包括肺炎和败血症)感染。在此,我们测试了新型氨基功能化银纳米颗粒(NH-AgNP)对 AR 细菌的体外抗菌功效、作用模式(MoA)和安全性。我们使用 Kirby-Bauer 圆盘扩散和标准生长测定法,测试了两种 AR 大肠杆菌菌株(即氨苄青霉素和卡那霉素耐药的大肠杆菌)和大肠杆菌 DH5α敏感株对 NH-AgNP 的敏感性。动态光散射(DLS)用于确定细胞碎片,相对电导率用作细胞泄漏的衡量标准,并用透射电子显微镜(TEM)进行了验证。我们使用多种氧化应激测定法,评估 NH-AgNP 对人肺上皮细胞的体外安全性。结果表明,氨苄青霉素和卡那霉素在高达 160μg/mL 的剂量下,对两种 AR 细菌菌株的生长均无抑制作用。NH-AgNP 表现出广谱杀菌活性,在剂量≥1μg/mL 时,可抑制三种细菌菌株的生长。DLS 和 TEM 显示,NH-AgNP 处理后会形成细胞碎片并发生细胞泄漏,表明存在两种可能的作用模式:静电相互作用,随后是细胞壁损伤。安全性评估显示,NH-AgNP 对人肺上皮细胞无细胞毒性且具有抗氧化作用。综上所述,与常用抗生素相比,NH-AgNP 可能是一种针对 AR 细菌感染的有效且更安全的杀菌疗法。