| Literature DB >> 31683853 |
Roberto Yañez-Macías1, Alexandra Muñoz-Bonilla2, Marco A De Jesús-Tellez3,4, Hortensia Maldonado-Textle5, Carlos Guerrero-Sánchez6,7, Ulrich S Schubert8,9, Ramiro Guerrero-Santos10.
Abstract
The rise of antibiotic-resistant microorganisms has become a critical issue in recent years and has promoted substantial research efforts directed to the development of more effective antimicrobial therapies utilizing different bactericidal mechanisms to neutralize infectious diseases. Modern approaches employ at least two mixed bioactive agents to enhance bactericidal effects. However, the combinations of drugs may not always show a synergistic effect, and further, could also produce adverse effects or stimulate negative outcomes. Therefore, investigations providing insights into the effective utilization of combinations of biocidal agents are of great interest. Sometimes, combination therapy is needed to avoid resistance development in difficult-to-treat infections or biofilm-associated infections treated with common biocides. Thus, this contribution reviews the literature reports discussing the usage of antimicrobial polymers along with nanomaterials or other inhibitors for the development of more potent biocidal therapies.Entities:
Keywords: antibacterials; biocide polymers; cationic copolymers
Year: 2019 PMID: 31683853 PMCID: PMC6918310 DOI: 10.3390/polym11111789
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Schematic representation of multicomponent systems based on antimicrobial polymers for enhanced biocidal therapies.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the general structure of N-halamine compounds.
Figure 3Schematic representations of several N-chloramine precursors containing either a quaternary ammonium moiety or a phosphonate functional group (top), and of an enhanced antimicrobial function between cationic groups and N-chloramine (bottom). Reproduced with permission from reference [54]. Copyright 2012 Wiley.
Antimicrobial investigations of systems containing N-halamines and quaternary ammonium salts (QAS) moieties attached to different surfaces.
| Schematic Representation of the Polymeric Agent | Surface | Micro-Organism | Percentage Reduction of Bacteria 1 (Representative Examples) | Contact Time | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Cotton (C) | MRSA | MRSA: 2.0 × 106 CFU/mL | 5 min | [ |
| HQ2 |
| Cotton (C) |
| 5 min | [ | |
| HQ2 |
| Mesoporous silica SBA-15 |
| 10 min | [ | |
| H1-Q1 |
| Cellulose fiber (Ce) |
| 5 min | [ | |
| HQ3 |
| Macroporous crosslinked chloromethylated polystyrene (CMPS) resin |
| 5 min | [ | |
| HQ4 |
| Polypropylene (PP) |
| 120 min | [ | |
| H2, |
| Cotton (C) |
| 30 min | [ | |
| HQ5 |
| Cotton (C) |
| 30 min | [ | |
1 Percentage reduction values were calculated from P= (1 − 10−L) × 100, where P is percent reduction and L is log reduction H = N-Halamine, Q = cationic compound, HQ = N-Halamine and cationic moieties in the same chain.
Figure 4Antimicrobial mechanisms of NO and its byproducts. Reproduced with permission from reference [66]. Copyright 2012 RSC.
Figure 5Comparison of the inhibition of viable colony forming units (CFU cm-2) of S. aureus and P. aeruginosa on the surface Carbosil of S-nitroso-N acetylpenicillamine (SNAP) films, benzophenone based quaternary ammonium molecules (BPAM) films and SNAP-BPAM films. Reproduced with permission from reference [76]. Copyright 2017 RSC.
Figure 6Schematic representation of the preparation of an antibacterial composite material, AgBr/NPVP (NPVP) poly(4-vinylpyridine)-co-poly(4-vinyl-N-hexylpyridinium bromide). Reproduced with permission from reference [94]. Copyright 2006 ACS.
Mechanisms of action of dual antimicrobial systems based in synthetic cationic polymers and metallic nanoparticles (NPs).
| Schematic Representation of the Antimicrobial Polymer | NP/Salt | Microorganism Tested | Synergistic Effect | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| AgBr (10–70 nm) |
| Membrane disrupting of the cationic polymer. Long lasting action without depletion of Ag+ ion. The dual system | [ |
|
| Ag, Cu |
| increased the killing rate of bacteria and kept activity for a longer time in comparison with AgBr alone. | [ |
|
| Ag (≈5 nm) |
| Positive charges and alkyl chains act together to damage the bacterial structure. This fact increases cell permeability allowing AgNps to penetrate and inhibit the function of enzymes and proteins. | [ |
|
| Ag |
| Release (Ag+) and contact killing mechanisms (QAS). Long sustainability. | [ |
|
| Ag (8 to 15 nm) |
| Higher branched degree of polymers produces smaller AgNps with better diffusion and interaction, increasing the antimicrobial performance. | [ |
|
| Ag salts |
| Dendrimer acted as a template to load silver salts allowing the high local concentration of exposed silver ions in the periphery. | [ |
|
| Ag (1.5 nm) |
| Peripheral +NMe3 groups in combination with biocidal silver cations. | [ |
|
| Zn ions |
| Interactions between cations of poly(ionic liquid) and cell wall, which boost the cell membrane permeability causing lysis of the cells. Zn2+ can produce reactive ROS in cells leading to the growth inhibition and death of bacteria. | [ |
|
| Mg(OH)2, Ca(OH)2 |
| Cationic copolymer provides additional charges on the NPs surfaces promoting affinity to bind to fungal cells, thus improving their interaction with the negatively charged microbial cell surface. | [ |
Figure 7Illustration of the synthetic procedure of AgNPs embedded PTBAM nanofibers. Reproduced with permission from reference [99]. Copyright 2011 ACS.
Figure 8Schematic representation of the proposed mechanism of antibacterial activity of the iodinated CS-AgNPs composite. Reproduced with permission from reference [108]. Copyright 2010 ACS.
Supportive antimicrobial systems based in chitosan and biocidal NPs.
| System | Nanoparticle | Microorganism Tested | Synergistic Effect | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Porous CS films | Ag (≈12 nm) | The presence of hundreds of porous enables formation of smaller AgNPs, which are more effective than longer. Besides CS absorbs a large amount of water and releases Ag more efficient than chitosan without porous. | [ | |
| Carboxymethyl CS/polyethylene oxide nanofibers | Ag (12 to 18 nm) | The fibrous structure of nanofibers allowed to increase the silver load. | [ | |
| Crosslinked CS/polyethylene glycol nanocomposite films | ZnO | Membrane disrupting of the cationic polymer. Ag and ZnO enhanced antibacterial property due to the photocatalysis and metal release process. Generation of active free radicals. | [ | |
| Nancomposite | GO | GO-ZnO induce ROS production that causes oxidative damage. The interaction bacteria with composite and ZnO-NPs increase its permeability and generate active superoxide ions (O2−), which can react with the peptide linkages in the cell wall of bacteria and thus disrupt. | [ | |
| CS coatings applied on cotton and cotton/polyester | Ag (3 to 5 nm) | AgNPs disturbs the permeability, respiration and cell division. ZnO NPs produce ROS. Under light conditions, Ag improved the charge transfer, reducing the chance of electron–hole pairs to recombine and promoting the generation of perhydroxyl radicals and other potent oxidizing radicals. | [ | |
| CS NPs | Cu, TiO2 | Negatively charged TiO2 NPs acts as a copper ion carrier, and its surface can absorb positively charged copper ions. Cu in combination with TiO2 can increase the amount of copper in bacteria and subsequently enhances antimicrobial activity. | [ | |
| Quaternized CS-clay (MMT) based nanocomposites | Ag (≈26 nm) | Exfoliated MMT with a large specific surface area adsorbs and fixes microorganisms. QAS disrupt cell membrane allowing AgNPs infiltrate and react with compounds in the cell wall. | [ |
Figure 9Proposed mechanism of action of CNTs against bacteria.
Figure 10MWCNTs-PPI-AgNP hybrid. Reproduced with permission from reference [143]. Copyright 2011 Elsevier.
Figure 11Antibiotic release from antibiotic-metallopolymer ion-pairs via lipoteichoic acid or β-lactamases. Reproduced with permission from reference [169]. Copyright 2014 ACS.
Selected antimicrobial systems based in cationic polymers and antibiotics.
| Schematic Representation of the Antimicrobial Polymer | Antibiotic | Microorganism Tested | Synergistic Effect | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Ciprofloxacin (CPF) |
| Integrity of the cell membrane was disrupted by hydrophobic moieties (in an optimal concentration). CPF inhibits the activity of the bacterial DNA gyrase, which leads to bacterial cell death. | [ |
|
| Ciprofloxacin (CPF) |
| [ | |
|
| Polypeptide antibiotics: |
| Combination of cationic conjugated polymers (CCPs) with polypeptide antibiotics facilitates and accelerates the rupture and collapse of bacterial membranes. | [ |
|
| Penicillin-G | MRSA | Adsorption of metallopolymer to the negatively charged MRSA surface which promotes damage in the cell walls and at the same time allows the release of complexed antibiotic. | [ |
|
| Penicillin-G |
| Phenylboronic acid binds to peptide-glycan via boron-polyol based boronolectin chemistry, cationic cobalto-cenium moiety interact with negatively charged cell membranes and antibiotic is reinstated with enhanced vitality to attack bacteria | [ |