Using Aldehyde Synergism To Direct the Design of Degradable Pro-Antimicrobial Networks

We describe the design and synthesis of degradable, dual-release, pro-antimicrobial poly­(thioether acetal) networks derived from synergistic pairs of aromatic terpene aldehydes. Initially, we identified pairs of aromatic terpene aldehyde derivatives exhibiting a synergistic antimicrobial activity a...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS applied bio materials 2018-12, Vol.1 (6), p.1983-1991
Hauptverfasser: Amato, Dahlia N, Amato, Douglas V, Adewunmi, Yetunde, Mavrodi, Olga V, Parsons, Keith H, Swilley, Sarah N, Braasch, Dwaine A, Walker, William D, Mavrodi, Dmitri V, Patton, Derek L
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We describe the design and synthesis of degradable, dual-release, pro-antimicrobial poly­(thioether acetal) networks derived from synergistic pairs of aromatic terpene aldehydes. Initially, we identified pairs of aromatic terpene aldehyde derivatives exhibiting a synergistic antimicrobial activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa by determining fractional inhibitory concentrations. Synergistic aldehydes were converted into dialkene acetal monomers and copolymerized at various ratios with a multifunctional thiol via thiol–ene photopolymerization. The step-growth nature of the thiol–ene polymerization ensures every cross-link junction contains a degradable acetal linkage enabling a fully cross-linked polymer network to revert into its small molecule constituents upon hydrolysis, releasing the synergistic aldehydes as active antimicrobial compounds. A three-pronged approach was used to characterize the poly­(thioether acetal) materials: (i) determination of the degradation/aldehyde release behavior, (ii) evaluation of the antimicrobial activity, and (iii) identification of the cellular pathways impacted by the aldehydes on a library of mutated bacteria. From this approach, a polymer network derived from a 40:60 p-bromobenzaldehyde/p-anisaldehyde monomer ratio exhibited potent antimicrobial action against Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a common opportunistic human pathogen. From a transposon mutagenesis assay, we showed that these aldehydes target porins and multidrug efflux pumps. The aldehydes released from the poly­(thioether acetal) networks exhibited negligible toxicity to mammalian tissue culture cells, supporting the potential development of these materials as dual-release antimicrobial biomaterial platforms.
ISSN:2576-6422
2576-6422
DOI:10.1021/acsabm.8b00500