Dual-action silver functionalized nanostructured titanium against drug resistant bacterial and fungal species

Nanostructured titanium substrates provide inherent antimicrobial activity against drug-resistant fungi and bacteria, mimicking structures on the surface of naturally antimicrobial organisms. The addition of silver nanoparticles onto the nanostructures provides a secondary chemical antimicrobial mec...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of colloid and interface science 2022-12, Vol.628, p.1049-1060
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Louisa Z.Y., Elbourne, Aaron, Shaw, Z.L., Cheeseman, Samuel, Goff, Abigail, Orrell-Trigg, Rebecca, Chapman, James, Murdoch, Billy J., Crawford, Russell J., Friedmann, Donia, Bryant, Saffron J., Truong, Vi Khanh, Caruso, Rachel A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nanostructured titanium substrates provide inherent antimicrobial activity against drug-resistant fungi and bacteria, mimicking structures on the surface of naturally antimicrobial organisms. The addition of silver nanoparticles onto the nanostructures provides a secondary chemical antimicrobial mechanism and increases the efficacy in the response for both microbial species via low concentrations of silver. [Display omitted] Titanium and its alloys are commonly used implant materials. Once inserted into the body, the interface of the biomaterials is the most likely site for the development of implant-associated infections. Imparting the titanium substrate with high-aspect-ratio nanostructures, which can be uniformly achieved using hydrothermal etching, enables a mechanical contact-killing (mechanoresponsive) mechanism of bacterial and fungal cells. Interaction between cells and the surface shows cellular inactivation via a physical mechanism meaning that careful engineering of the interface is needed to optimse the technology. This mechanism of action is only effective towards surface adsorbed microbes, thus any cells not directly in contact with the substrate will survive and limit the antimicrobial efficacy of the titanium nanostructures. Therefore, we propose that a dual-action mechanoresponsive and chemical–surface approach must be utilised to improve antimicrobial activity. The addition of antimicrobial silver nanoparticles will provide a secondary, chemical mechanism to escalate the microbial response in tandem with the physical puncture of the cells. Hydrothermal etching is used as a facile method to impart variant nanostrucutres on the titanium substrate to increase the antimicrobial response. Increasing concentrations (0.25 M, 0.50 M, 1.0 M, 2.0 M) of sodium hydroxide etching solution were used to provide differing degrees of nanostructured morphology on the surface after 3 h of heating at 150 °C. This produced titanium nanospikes, nanoblades, and nanowires, respectively, as a function of etchant concentration. These substrates then provided an interface for the deposition of silver nanoparticles via a reduction pathway. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcous aureus (MRSA) and Candida auris (C. auris) were used as model bacteria and fungi, respectively, to test the effectiveness of the nanostructured titanium with and without silver nanoparticles, and the bio-interactions at the interface. The presence of nanostructure increased the bactericidal re
ISSN:0021-9797
1095-7103
DOI:10.1016/j.jcis.2022.08.052