Maršík Dominik, Danda Matěj, Otta Jaroslav, Thoresen Petter P, Mat Átková Olga, Rova Ulrika, Christakopoulos Paul, Matsakas Leonidas, Masák Jan
Department of Biotechnology, University of Chemistry and Technology, Prague 166 28, Czech Republic.
Department of Physics and Measurements, University of Chemistry and Technology, Prague 166 28, Czech Republic.
ACS Omega. 2024 Nov 20;9(48):47765-47787. doi: 10.1021/acsomega.4c08117. eCollection 2024 Dec 3.
Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are excellent antimicrobial agents and promising candidates for preventing or treating bacterial infections caused by antibiotic resistant strains. However, their increasing use in commercial products raises concerns about their environmental impact. In addition, traditional physicochemical approaches often involve harmful agents and excessive energy consumption, resulting in AgNPs with short-term colloidal stability and silver ion leaching. To address these issues, we designed stable hybrid lignin-silver nanoparticles (AgLigNPs) intended to effectively hit bacterial envelopes as a main antimicrobial target. The lignin nanoparticles (LigNPs), serving as a reducing and stabilizing agent for AgNPs, have a median size of 256 nm and a circularity of 0.985. These LigNPs were prepared using the dialysis solvent exchange method, producing spherical particles stable under alkaline conditions and featuring reducing groups oriented toward a wrinkled surface, facilitating AgNPs synthesis and attachment. Maximum accumulation of silver on the LigNP surface was observed at a mass reaction ratio m:m of 0.25, at pH 11. The AgLigNPs completely inhibited suspension growth and reduced biofilm development by 50% in three tested strains of at a concentration of 80/9.5 (lignin/silver) mg L. Compared to unattached AgNPs, AgLigNPs required two to eight times lower silver concentrations to achieve complete inhibition. Additionally, our silver-containing nanosystems were effective against bacteria at safe concentrations in HEK-293 and HaCaT tissue cultures. Stability experiments revealed that the nanosystems tend to aggregate in media used for bacterial cell cultures but remain stable in media used for tissue cultures. In all tested media, the nanoparticles retained their integrity, and the presence of lignin facilitated the prevention of silver ions from leaching. Overall, our data demonstrate the suitability of AgLigNPs for further valorization in the biomedical sector.
银纳米颗粒(AgNPs)是出色的抗菌剂,有望用于预防或治疗由抗生素耐药菌株引起的细菌感染。然而,它们在商业产品中的使用日益增加,引发了人们对其环境影响的担忧。此外,传统的物理化学方法通常涉及有害试剂和过多的能源消耗,导致AgNPs具有短期胶体稳定性和银离子浸出问题。为了解决这些问题,我们设计了稳定的杂化木质素-银纳米颗粒(AgLigNPs),旨在有效地作用于细菌包膜这一主要抗菌靶点。木质素纳米颗粒(LigNPs)作为AgNPs的还原剂和稳定剂,中位粒径为256 nm,圆度为0.985。这些LigNPs采用透析溶剂交换法制备,产生在碱性条件下稳定的球形颗粒,其还原基团朝向有褶皱的表面,有利于AgNPs的合成和附着。在pH 11时,质量反应比m:m为0.25时观察到银在LigNP表面的最大积累。在浓度为80/9.5(木质素/银)mg/L时,AgLigNPs完全抑制了三种受试菌株的悬浮生长,并使生物膜形成减少了50%。与未附着的AgNPs相比,AgLigNPs达到完全抑制所需的银浓度低两到八倍。此外,我们的含银纳米系统在HEK-293和HaCaT组织培养中在安全浓度下对细菌有效。稳定性实验表明,纳米系统在用于细菌细胞培养的培养基中倾向于聚集,但在用于组织培养的培养基中保持稳定。在所有测试的培养基中,纳米颗粒保持其完整性,木质素的存在有助于防止银离子浸出。总体而言,我们的数据证明了AgLigNPs在生物医学领域进一步应用的适用性。