Evaluation of 1,9-Dimethyl-Methylene Blue nanoencapsulation using rhamnolipid nanoparticles to potentiate the Photodynamic Therapy technique in Candida albicans: In vitro study

With the rapid development of nanotechnology, various functional nanomaterials have shown exciting potential in biomedical areas such as drug delivery, antitumor, and antibacterial therapy. These nanomaterials improve the stability and selectivity of loaded drugs, reduce drug-induced side effects, r...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of photochemistry and photobiology. B, Biology Biology, 2024-07, Vol.256, p.112943-112943, Article 112943
Hauptverfasser: Nunes, Iago P.F., de Jesus, Romário S., Almeida, Jeovana Amorim, Costa, Wellington L.R., Malta, Marcos, Soares, Luiz G.P., de Almeida, Paulo F., Pinheiro, Antônio L.B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:With the rapid development of nanotechnology, various functional nanomaterials have shown exciting potential in biomedical areas such as drug delivery, antitumor, and antibacterial therapy. These nanomaterials improve the stability and selectivity of loaded drugs, reduce drug-induced side effects, realize controlled and targeted drug release, and increase therapeutic efficacy. The increased resistance to antifungal microbicides in medical practice and their side effects stimulate interest in new therapies, such as Photodynamic Therapy (PDT), which do not generate resistance in microorganisms and effectively control the pathology. The present study aimed to evaluate, in vitro, the efficacy of photodynamic therapy on Candida albicans using 1,9-Dimethyl-Methylene Blue (DMMB) as photosensitizer, red LED (λ630), and nanoencapsulation of DMMB (RL-NPs/DMMB) using rhamnolipids produced by Pseudomonas aeruginosa to evaluate if there is better performance of DMMB + RL particles compared to DMMB alone via the characterization of DMMB + RL and colony forming count. The tests were carried out across six experimental groups (Control, DMMB, RL-NPs, RL-NPs/DMMB, PDT and PDT + RL-NPs/DMMB) using in the groups with nanoparticles, DMMB (750 ng/mL) encapsulated with rhamnolipids in a 1:1 ratio, the light source consisted of a prototype built with a set of red LEDs with an energy density of 20 J/cm2. The results showed that applying PDT combined with encapsulation (RL-NPs/DMMB) was a more practical approach to inhibit Candida albicans (2 log reduction) than conventional applications, with a possible clinical application protocol. •Functional nanomaterials have shown interesting potential in biomedical areas such as drug delivery, antitumor and antibacterial therapy.•These improve the stability and selectivity of loaded drugs and increase therapeutic efficacy.•The increase in resistance antifungals and side effects stimulated interest in PDT.•Efficacy of PDT on C. albicans using DMMB, RL-NPs/DMMB and red LED was studied in vitro.•PDT combined with RL-NPs/DMMB resulted in 99.9% logarithmic reduction when compared to Control.
ISSN:1011-1344
1873-2682
DOI:10.1016/j.jphotobiol.2024.112943