| Literature DB >> 28286459 |
I DeAlba-Montero1, Jesús Guajardo-Pacheco2, Elpidio Morales-Sánchez3, Rene Araujo-Martínez4, G M Loredo-Becerra4, Gabriel-Alejandro Martínez-Castañón2, Facundo Ruiz5, M E Compeán Jasso5.
Abstract
This paper reports a comparison of the antibacterial properties of copper-amino acids chelates and copper nanoparticles against Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, and Enterococcus faecalis. These copper-amino acids chelates were synthesized by using a soybean aqueous extract and copper nanoparticles were produced using as a starting material the copper-amino acids chelates species. The antibacterial activity of the samples was evaluated by using the standard microdilution method (CLSI M100-S25 January 2015). In the antibacterial activity assays copper ions and copper-EDTA chelates were included as references, so that copper-amino acids chelates can be particularly suitable for acting as an antibacterial agent, so they are excellent candidates for specific applications. Additionally, to confirm the antimicrobial mechanism on bacterial cells, MTT assay (3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide) was carried out. A significant enhanced antimicrobial activity and a specific strain were found for copper chelates over E. faecalis. Its results would eventually lead to better utilization of copper-amino acids chelate for specific application where copper nanoparticles can be not used.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28286459 PMCID: PMC5327766 DOI: 10.1155/2017/1064918
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioinorg Chem Appl Impact factor: 7.778
Figure 1UV-Vis spectrum of (a) ionic solution of copper and (b) copper-amino acids chelate.
Figure 2Infrared absorption spectra of copper-amino acids chelate.
Figure 3UV-Vis spectrum of (a) EDTA solution, (b) ionic solution of copper, and (c) EDTA-copper chelate.
Figure 4UV-Vis of copper nanoparticles sample.
Figure 5TEM image of copper nanoparticles sample and the particle size distribution histogram.
Figure 6Dynamic Light Scattering measurement of copper nanoparticles sample.
Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC).
| Sample | MIC copper (mM) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Bacterial strains | |||
|
|
|
| |
| Soybeans extract | —a | —a | —a |
| Ionic solution of Cu | 20 ± 0 | 20 ± 0 | 20 ± 0 |
| Copper-amino acids chelate | 10 ± 0 | 10 ± 0 | 5 ± 0 |
| Copper nanoparticles | 40 ± 0 | 40 ± 0 | 20 ± 0 |
| EDTA-copper chelate | 20 ± 0 | 20 ± 0 | 20 ± 0 |
| EDTA solution | 40 ± 0 | 40 ± 0 | 40 ± 0 |
aThe antibacterial activity was not found with the mM concentrations used in this work.
Figure 7MICs of nanoparticles against bacterial strain Enterococcus faecalis. (a) Copper nanoparticles; (b) copper-amino acids chelate.
Figure 8Effect of copper-amino acids chelate sample by MTT assay.