| Literature DB >> 30519535 |
Jin Zhou1, Danyu Yao1, Zhiyong Qian1, Sen Hou1, Linhao Li1, Yubo Fan1,2,3.
Abstract
A methodology for wound state sensing in terms of its colonization with pathogenic bacteria such as Staphylococcus aureus or Pseudomonas aeruginosa has been developed. Here we report polydiacetylene (PDA) liposomes containing self-quenched carboxyfluorescein dye are only sensitive to toxins/enzymes secreted by Pathogenic bacteria but not by non-pathogenic species of Escherichia coli (DH5α). The basis of the detection assay is that at high concentration, carboxyfluorescein is non-fluorescent. Following breakdown of the bilayer of liposome containers by bacterial toxins, the dye becomes diluted and "switches on". The methodology can be easily adapted to evaluate the release of payloads from PDA liposomes in terms of fluorescence intensity and in addition to detect the potential interaction mechanism of biomimetic bilayer and pathogenic bacteria. •Self-quenched when encapsulated at high concentration, while fluorescence when diluted in solution•Easy quantification by measuring fluorescence intensity•Simple measurement procedure required (plate reading fluorimeter).Entities:
Keywords: A methodology for detecting the wound state sensing in terms of its colonization of pathogenic bacteria; Carboxyfluorescein; Fluorescence intensity; Pathogenic bacteria; Polydiacetylene (PDA) liposomes; Self-quenching
Year: 2018 PMID: 30519535 PMCID: PMC6260427 DOI: 10.1016/j.mex.2018.11.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MethodsX ISSN: 2215-0161
Composition of buffer system.
| Constituent | Mass(mg) |
|---|---|
| HEPES | 119.2 |
| NaCl | 29.2 |
| NaOH | 511.5 |
| EDTA | 14.2 |
| 5(6)-carboxyfluorescein | 1784.6 |
Fig. 1Characterization of PDA liposomes. (a) DLS studies of size, zeta potential (ZP) and polydispersity index values of PDA liposomes. (b) (c) SEM and fluorescence microscopy image indicating the morphology of PDA liposomes with the average size of ∼200 nm (scale bars: 1 1 μm). Fig. 1(a) and (b) were adopted from Ref. [5].
Concentration of listed lytic agents.
| Compound | Concentration |
|---|---|
| Triton X-100 | 1% |
| Phospholipase A2 | 30–120 units/mg, honey bee venom |
| α-Haemolysin | ≥100 units/mg, |
Fig. 3Sensitivity of PDA vesicles to different lytic agents. (a) PDA vesicle sensitivity to 1% Triton X-100 as a function of TCDA mol%. (b) PDA vesicle sensitivity to lytic toxins of phospholipase A2 (honey bee venom, 30–120 units/mg) and α-hemolysin (Staphylococcus aureus, ≥100 units/mg) as a function of TCDA mol%.
Fig. 2Graph showing self-quenching behavior depending upon varying concentrations. The concentration at which self-quenching occurs is when the concentration higher than 9 mM.
Fig. 4Time course of the kinetics of the interaction of bacteria with PDA vesicles. Toxins secreted by P. aeruginosa and S. aureus induced permeabilization of different concentration of PDA vesicles as revealed by the increase of fluorescence of 5(6)-carboxyfluorescein when this is released into the external solution; E. coli (DH5α) as control did not permeabilize vesicles. (a) phospholipid vesicles vs three strains of bacteria; (b) 20 mol% PDA vesicles vs three strains of bacteria; (c) 30 mol% PDA vesicles vs three strains of bacteria; (d) 40 mol% PDA vesicles vs three strains of bacteria.
| Subject area | |
| More specific subject area | Nanoparticles, Drug delivery |
| Method name | A methodology for detecting the wound state sensing in terms of its colonization of pathogenic bacteria |
| Name and reference of original method | Zhou J, Thet Naing T, Hong S-h, Mercer-Chalmers JD, Laabei M, Young AER, et al. Development of a prototype wound dressing technology which can detect and report colonization by pathogenic bacteria. Biosensors & Bioelectronics. 2011; 30:67–72. |
| Resource availability | No |