| Literature DB >> 27042940 |
Qian Cai1, Yangyang Gao1, Tianyi Gao1, Shi Lan2, Oudjaniyobi Simalou3, Xinyue Zhou1, Yanling Zhang1, Chokto Harnoode1, Ge Gao4, Alideertu Dong1.
Abstract
Zinc oxides have gained exciting achievements in antimicrobial fields because of their advantageous properties, whereas their biological effects on bacteria are currently underexplored. In this study, biological effects of flower-shaped nano zinc oxides on bacteria were systematically investigated. Zinc oxide nanoflowers with controllable morphologies (viz., rod flowers, fusiform flowers, and petal flowers) were synthesized by modulating merely base type and concentration using the hydrothermal process. Their antibacterial power is in an order of petal flowers > fusiform flowers > rod flowers because of their differences in microscopic parameters such as specific surface area, pore size, and Zn-polar plane, etc. More importantly, the role of morphology in influencing biological effect on bacteria was examined, focusing on the morphology-induced effect on integrality of cell wall, permeability of cell membrane, DNA cleavage, etc. As for cytotoxicity, all petal flowers, fusiform flowers, and rod flowers show trivial cytotoxicity to the Hela cells. This work provides a guide for enhancing biological effect of the biocides on pathogenic bacteria by the morphological modulation.Entities:
Keywords: antibacterial; bacteria; biological effect; morphology; zinc oxide nanoflower
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27042940 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.5b11573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229