| Literature DB >> 29675656 |
Carlos A P Bastos1,2, Nuno Faria3,4, Angela Ivask5, Olesja M Bondarenko6, Anne Kahru6,7, Jonathan Powell8,9.
Abstract
Bacterial resistance to antimicrobial therapies is an increasing clinical problem. This is as true for topical applications as it is for systemic therapy. Topically, copper ions may be effective and cheap antimicrobials that act through multiple pathways thereby limiting opportunities to bacteria for resistance. However, the chemistry of copper does not lend itself to facile formulations that will readily release copper ions at biologically compatible pHs. Here, we have developed nanoparticulate copper hydroxide adipate tartrate (CHAT) as a cheap, safe, and readily synthesised material that should enable antimicrobial copper ion release in an infected wound environment.First, we synthesised CHAT and showed that this had disperse aquated particle sizes of 2-5 nm and a mean zeta potential of - 40 mV. Next, when diluted into bacterial medium, CHAT demonstrated similar efficacy to copper chloride against Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus, with dose-dependent activity occurring mostly around 12.5-50 mg/L of copper. Indeed, at these levels, CHAT very rapidly dissolved and, as confirmed by a bacterial copper biosensor, showed identical intracellular loading to copper ions derived from copper chloride. However, when formulated at 250 mg/L in a topically applied matrix, namely hydroxyethyl cellulose, the benefit of CHAT over copper chloride was apparent. The former yielded rapid sustained release of copper within the bactericidal range, but the copper chloride, which formed insoluble precipitates at such concentration and pH, achieved a maximum release of 10 ± 7 mg/L copper by 24 h.We provide a practical formulation for topical copper-based antimicrobial therapy. Further studies, especially in vivo, are merited.Entities:
Keywords: Antibacterial activity; Bacterial biosensor; Copper; Labile nanoparticle; Nanoparticle; Topical antimicrobial
Year: 2018 PMID: 29675656 PMCID: PMC5908776 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-018-2520-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1Characterisation of CHAT stock solution. a Copper phase distribution at 2.5 g/L CHAT: soluble (< 3 KDa) and nanoparticulate percentage. b Nanoparticle dispersion imaging by TEM. c Hydrodynamic particle size distribution of freshly prepared particles, as determined by dynamic light scattering. d Zeta potential distribution (n = 3; error bars represent standard deviations)
Fig. 2Escherichia coli (top) and Staphylococcus aureus (bottom) growth curves, represented here as optical density, upon exposure to different concentrations of copper chloride (left) or CHAT (right) in supplemented HMM.
Fig. 3a Dissolution profile of CHAT in supplemented HMM at 12.5, 25, and 50 mg/L copper. Dose-response of bioluminescence induction of recombinant luminescent bacteria: b intracellular copper ion-responding E. coli MC1061 pSLcueR/pDNPcopAlux bacteria, c DNA damage-responding E. coli MC1061 (pDEWrecAlux), and d superoxide anion-responding E. coli K12::soxRSsodAlux upon exposure for 4 h in supplemented HMM to copper chloride, CHAT (concentration in mg Cu/L), and respective controls (menadione in c and H2O2 in d)
Fig. 4Copper release from HEC matrices containing CHAT, copper chloride, or copper oxide nanoparticles (CuO NPs), all at 250 mg/L copper