Gondil Vijay Singh, Ashcraft Morgan, Ghalei Sama, Kumar Anil, Wilson Sarah N, Devine Ryan, Handa Hitesh, Brisbois Elizabeth J
School of Chemical, Materials and Biomedical Engineering, College of Engineering, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602, United States.
Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Sciences Department, College of Pharmacy, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602, United States.
ACS Appl Bio Mater. 2025 Feb 17;8(2):1362-1376. doi: 10.1021/acsabm.4c01638. Epub 2025 Feb 3.
The treatment of critically ill patients has made great strides in the past few decades due to the rapid development of indwelling medical devices. Despite immense advancements in the design of these devices, indwelling medical device-associated infections and thrombosis are two major clinical problems that may lead to device failure and compromise clinical outcomes. Antibiotics are the current treatment choice for these infections; however, the global emergence of antibiotic-resistance and their biofilm formation abilities complicate the management of such infections. Moreover, systemic administration of anticoagulants has been used to counter medical device-induced thrombosis, but a range of serious adverse effects associated with all types of available anticoagulants entails exploring alternative options to counter device-associated thrombosis. In this study, bacteriophages (phages) were covalently immobilized on polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) surface containing the nitric oxide (NO) donor -nitroso--acetylpenicillamine (SNAP) via SNAP impregnation method. This dual strategy combines the targeted antibacterial activity of phages against bacterial pathogens with the antibacterial-antithrombotic activity of NO released from the polymeric surface. The PDMS, SNAP-PDMS, phage-immobilized PDMS (PDMS-Phage), and phage-immobilized SNAP-PDMS (SNAP-PDMS-Phage) surfaces were characterized for their surface topology, elemental composition, contact angle, SNAP loading, NO release and phage distribution. SNAP-PDMS and SNAP-PDMS-Phage surfaces showed similar and consistent NO release profiles over 24 h of incubation. Immobilization of whole phages on PDMS and SNAP-PDMS was achieved with densities of 2.4 ± 0.54 and 2.1 ± 0.33 phages μm, respectively. Immobilized phages were found to retain their activity, and SNAP-PDMS-Phage surfaces showed a significant reduction in planktonic (99.99 ± 0.08%) as well as adhered (99.80 ± 0.05%) as compared to controls in log killing assays. The SNAP-PDMS-Phage surfaces also exhibited significantly reduced platelet adhesion by 64.65 ± 2.95% as compared to control PDMS surfaces. All fabricated surfaces were found to be nonhemolytic and do not exhibit any significant cytotoxic effects toward mammalian fibroblast cells. This study is the first of its kind to demonstrate the combinatorial pertinence of phages and NO to prevent antibiotic-resistant/sensitive bacterial infections and thrombosis associated with indwelling medical devices.
在过去几十年中,由于植入式医疗器械的迅速发展,危重症患者的治疗取得了巨大进展。尽管这些器械在设计上有了巨大进步,但植入式医疗器械相关感染和血栓形成是两个主要的临床问题,可能导致器械故障并影响临床结果。抗生素是目前治疗这些感染的选择;然而,全球范围内抗生素耐药性的出现及其生物膜形成能力使此类感染的管理变得复杂。此外,全身使用抗凝剂已被用于对抗医疗器械引起的血栓形成,但与所有可用抗凝剂相关的一系列严重不良反应需要探索替代方案来对抗器械相关血栓形成。在本研究中,通过亚硝基乙酰青霉胺(SNAP)浸渍法将噬菌体共价固定在含有一氧化氮(NO)供体亚硝基乙酰青霉胺(SNAP)的聚二甲基硅氧烷(PDMS)表面。这种双重策略将噬菌体对细菌病原体的靶向抗菌活性与聚合物表面释放的NO的抗菌抗血栓活性结合起来。对PDMS、SNAP-PDMS、噬菌体固定化PDMS(PDMS-Phage)和噬菌体固定化SNAP-PDMS(SNAP-PDMS-Phage)表面的表面拓扑结构、元素组成、接触角、SNAP负载、NO释放和噬菌体分布进行了表征。SNAP-PDMS和SNAP-PDMS-Phage表面在孵育24小时内显示出相似且一致的NO释放曲线。将完整噬菌体固定在PDMS和SNAP-PDMS上的密度分别为2.4±0.54和2.1±0.33个噬菌体/μm。发现固定化噬菌体保留了其活性,并且在对数杀灭试验中,与对照相比,SNAP-PDMS-Phage表面的浮游菌(99.99±0.08%)和黏附菌(99.80±0.05%)显著减少。与对照PDMS表面相比,SNAP-PDMS-Phage表面的血小板黏附也显著降低了64.65±2.95%。所有制备的表面均被发现无溶血作用,并且对哺乳动物成纤维细胞没有表现出任何显著的细胞毒性作用。本研究首次证明了噬菌体和NO在预防与植入式医疗器械相关的耐药/敏感细菌感染和血栓形成方面的组合相关性。