| Literature DB >> 25023605 |
Lee-Chun Su1, Zhiwei Xie2, Yi Zhang1, Kytai Truong Nguyen1, Jian Yang2.
Abstract
Citrate-based polymers possess unique advantages for various biomedical applications since citric acid is a natural metabolism product, which is biocompatible and antimicrobial. In polymer synthesis, citric acid also provides multiple functional groups to control the crosslinking of polymers and active binding sites for further conjugation of biomolecules. Our group recently developed a number of citrate-based polymers for various biomedical applications by taking advantage of their controllable chemical, mechanical, and biological characteristics. In this study, various citric acid derived biodegradable polymers were synthesized and investigated for their physicochemical and antimicrobial properties. Results indicate that citric acid derived polymers reduced bacterial proliferation to different degrees based on their chemical composition. Among the studied polymers, poly(octamethylene citrate) showed ~70-80% suppression to microbe proliferation, owing to its relatively higher ratio of citric acid contents. Crosslinked urethane-doped polyester elastomers and biodegradable photoluminescent polymers also exhibited significant bacteria reduction of ~20 and ~50% for Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli, respectively. Thus, the intrinsic antibacterial properties in citrate-based polymers enable them to inhibit bacteria growth without incorporation of antibiotics, silver nanoparticles, and other traditional bacteria-killing agents suggesting that the citrate-based polymers are unique beneficial materials for wound dressing, tissue engineering, and other potential medical applications where antimicrobial property is desired.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial polymers; biodegradable elastomers; citric acid; crosslinking; wound dressing
Year: 2014 PMID: 25023605 PMCID: PMC4090902 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2014.00023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Monomer ratios and crosslinking methods for CA based polymer synthesis and scaffold fabrication.
| Molar ratio of citric acid | Type and molar ratio of diol | Type and molar ratio of the third compound | Crosslinking method | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| POC | 1.0 | 1, 8-Octanediol: 1.0 | None | Oven heating |
| BPLP | 1.0 | 1, 8-Octanediol: 1.0 | L - Cysteine: 0.2 | Oven heating |
| CUPE | 1.0 | 1, 8-Octanediol: 1.0 | HDI: 0.9 | Oven heating |
| POMC | 0.6 | 1, 8-Octanediol: 1.0 | Maleic acid: 0.4 | Oven heating and UV exposure |
Figure 1Chemical structures and synthesis routes of citric acid based polymers including POC, BPLP, POMC, and CUPE.
Figure 2Water uptake of crosslinked citrate-based polymers and Hydrofera Blue after different time of incubation in DI water.
Figure 3.
Figure 4Bacteria turbidity (optical density) studies with different citrate-based polymers (50 mg in 1 ml solution) for 28 h, in which (A) is . Cell suspensions without any treatment are the negative controls, while free ampicillin (2.5 μg/ml), citric acid (29 mg/ml), and commercial bacteriostatic Hydrofera Blue (50 mg in 1 ml solution) are positive controls;#p < 0.01.
Figure 5Percentage kill of . The result was calculated based on reduction of CFUs before and after bacteria suspensions incubating with CA polymers. Hydrofera Blue served as the positive control and PLGA scaffolds served as the negative control; **p < 0.01 comparing to PLGA group.
Figure 6SEM images of microbes (.