| Literature DB >> 31847133 |
Raphaël E Duval1,2, Jimmy Gouyau1, Emmanuel Lamouroux1.
Abstract
Due to the constant increase in the number of infectious diseases and the concomitant lack of treatment available, metallic nanoparticles (e.g., silver nanoparticles) have been of particular interest in the last decades. Indeed, several studies suggest that silver nanoparticles have valuable antimicrobial activities, especially against bacteria, which may lead us to think that these nanoparticles may one day be an attractive therapeutic option for the treatment of bacterial infections. Unfortunately, when we look a little closer to these studies, we can see a very great heterogeneity (e.g., in the study design, in the synthetic process of nanoparticles, in the methods that explore the antibacterial properties of nanoparticles and in the bacteria chosen) making cross-interpretation between these studies impossible, and significantly limiting the interest of silver nanoparticles as promising antibacterial agents. We have selected forty-nine international publications published since 2015, and propose to discuss, not the results obtained, but precisely the different methodologies developed in these publications. Through this discussion, we highlighted the aspects to improve, or at least to homogenize, in order to definitively establish the interest of silver nanoparticles as valuable antibacterial agents.Entities:
Keywords: antibacterial activity; methods of evaluation; physicochemical properties; silver nanoparticles
Year: 2019 PMID: 31847133 PMCID: PMC6956306 DOI: 10.3390/nano9121775
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Methods, synthesis and characterizations of silver nanoparticles, and antibacterial activity evaluation of selected publications from the 2015–2018 period.
| Stabilizer | NPs Size (nm) | NPs Shape | Stock Suspension Concentration or Mass | Zeta Potential (mV) * | Comment | Bacteria | Bacteria Origin | Protocol | Culture Media | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| “Naked” | 19.5 ± 7.7 | Nano-sphere | N/A | −18.0 ± 0.6 | NaBH4 + AgNO3 in presence of ultrasonication |
| KCCM 13807 | Kirby-Bauer method | Mueller Hinton Agar | [ |
| 10 | Nano-flake | 50 ppm | N/A | Axonnite Silver suspended in demineralized water | Clinical | Microdilution method | N/A | [ | ||
| 10 | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | Vapor nucleation in N2 gas |
| N/A | Kirby-Bauer method | Mueller Hinton 2 Agar | [ | |
| 55.6 ± 2.9 (DLS) | Nanosphere | 8.53 mg | −51.5 ± 2.5 | Electrochemically synthesized | Clinical isolates | Kirby-Bauer method | Mueller Hinton | [ | ||
| 2–5 | Nano-sphere | 50 mg/kg | +9.2 | Nano-Tech (Warsaw, Poland) |
| PCM 2191 | Microdilution method | Tryptone Soy yeast extract broth | [ | |
| 23.6 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | −28.3 | Nanoleader (Korea) | KCTC 1116 | Growth Curves | Luria Bertani | [ | ||
| 10 | Nano-sphere | 1 mg/mL | N/A | Sisco Research lab. | ATCC 25923 | Agar Well diffusion method | Mueller Hinton Agar | [ | ||
| “Naked” | 40 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | AgNO3 + NaBH4 |
| N/A | Agar Well diffusion method | Mueller Hinton Agar | [ |
| Unknown “Naked” | 35 | Nano-sphere | 20 µg/mL | N/A | Sigma Aldrich (Dorset UK) Laser generated | JM 109 | Agar Well diffusion method | Mueller Hinton | [ | |
| Citrate | 23 ± 2 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | 2 mM | N/A | Citrate BioPure™ Silver, Nanocomposix (San Diego, CA, USA) | Clinical isolates | Colony Forming Units | Mueller Hinton | [ | |
| 6.0–28.2 (XRD) | N/A | −28.2 to −32.0 | Plasma discharge |
| ATCC 25923 | Kirby-Bauer method | Nutrient Agar | [ | ||
| 2.3 ± 0.5 | Nano-sphere | N/A1 | N/A1 | NaBH4 + AgNO3 + sodium citrate |
| ATCC 35696 | Microdilution method | Broth medium | [ | |
| 40–50 | Nano-sphere | N/A | −28.8 | Citrate thermal reduction method |
| ATCC 25923 | Microdilution method | Nutrient Agar | [ | |
| 20.1 ± 4.4 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | −19.2 ± 0.7 | Citrate thermal reduction method |
| ATCC 25922 | TKA | Luria Bertani | [ | |
| 10–40 (TEM) | Sharp-tipped triangular, truncated triangular, nanoprisms, decahedra, tetrahedra | N/A | N/A | Photochemical synthesis: |
| ATCC 25922 | Growth Curves | Luria Bertani | [ | |
| Citrate | 20 ± 9 | Nano-sphere | N/A | −26.37 | AgNO3 + citrate + NaBH4 |
| ATCC 25923 | Agar Well diffusion method | Nutrient Agar | [ |
| 42–58 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | AgNO3 + citrate + NaBH4; polydisperse; XRD11: intense reflection at (111) |
| N/A | Kirby-Bauer method | Tryptone Soy | [ | |
| 15 | Nano-sphere | N/A | −38.8 | AgNO3 + Citrate + NaBH4 |
| N/A | Kirby-Bauer method | Nutrient Agar | [ | |
| GSH13 | 10–50 | Nano-sphere | 0.197 mg/mL | N/A | AgBF4 + NaBH4 + glutathione | Animal or Human clinical isolates | Microdilution method | Brucella | [ | |
| D-xylose | 33 | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | [ | ||
| L-fucose | 10.15 ± 3.37 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | −65.4 | AgNO3 + NaBH4 + sodium citrate + mercaptopropionic acid, then L-fucose | N/A | Microdilution method | Luria Bertani without Chloride ions | [ | |
| PEG | 15.8 ± 2.2 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | −17.2 ± 2.1 | AgNO3 + EG/PEG |
| ATCC 6538 | Microdilution method | Mueller Hinton | [ |
| PC | 3.3 ± 0.9 | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | Zwitterionic Protection: AgNO3 + NaBH4 + PC-SH |
| OW6 | Growth curves | Todd Hewitt broth | [ |
| PVA | 31 (SEM; TEM: 26) | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | PVA + AgNO3 + NaBH4 | N/A | Kirby-Bauer method | Nutrient Agar | [ | |
| PVP/citrate | 50–60 | Semi-triangular and truncated triangular silver nanoparticles + few nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | Citrate + AgNO3 + NaBH4 + PVP + visible-light halogen lamp (50 and 100 W, respectively); bigger nanoparticles (>100 nm) obtained with visible-light halogen lamps with higher intensities |
| N/A | Colony Forming Units | Nutrient Agar | [ |
| PVP20 | 14.0 ± 0.3 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | 1 mg/mL | −27.3 | Nanocomposix, OECD standard BioPure, PVP20 40kDa | MG1655 | Growth curves | Tryptone Soy | [ | |
| 5 | Nano-sphere | 1 mg/mL | N/A | Shanghai Institute of Fine Chemical Materials (China) |
| ATCC 8739 | Poisoned Food Technique | Mueller Hinton | [ | |
| 8 | Nano-sphere | N/A | −22.36 | PVP + ethylene glycol + AgNO3; redispersed in water |
| 4AK4 | Kirby-Bauer method | N/A | [ | |
| 15.6 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | PVP + AgNO3 + NaBH4 in water; polydisperse | N/A | Colony Forming Units | N/A | [ | ||
| 3–34 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | AgNO3 + Ethanol + PVP (55000 molecular mass) in water | ATCC 6537 | N/A | Mueller Hinton | [ | ||
| 10–15 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | AgNO3 + PVP (k30; Mw. 40000) + hydrazine; influence of AgNO3, PVP and hydrazine concentrations |
| ATCC 25922 | Kirby-Bauer method | Nutrient Agar | [ | |
| 60 ± 15 | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | AgNO3 + PVP (k30) + ethylene glycol + NaCl (0. 1, and 5 mg, respectively) |
| ATCC 25922 | Growth curves | Luria Bertani | [ | |
| 20.6 ± 3.1 | Nano-sphere | 1 mg/mL | −35 | Nanocomposix (San Diego, CA, USA) | Chicken isolates | Microdilution method | Mueller Hinton | [ | ||
| PVP | 31.2 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | +18.7 | AgNO3 + PVP or glycerol + sodium citrate |
| ATCC 29544 | Microdilution method | Luria Bertani | [ |
| Oleylamine | 10 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | −7.11 | ColdStones Tech. (Suzhou, China) |
| ATCC 6633 | Growth curves | Luria Bertani | [ |
| Casein | 12.5 ± 4 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | −26.6 ± 1.7 | Lab. Argenol S. L. (Zaragoza, Spain) |
| MC 1061 | Bioluminescence inhibition assay | Luria Bertani | [ |
| Sericin | 3.78 ± 1.14 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | Silk sericin protein + AgNO3 + NaBH4 |
| ATCC 25923 | Cell counting | Nutrient medium | [ |
| Thioacetic acid | 20–25 | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | Thioacetic or propionic acid + silver acetate + sodium carbonate (US20120100372A1) |
| ATCC 25923 | Microdilution method | Mueller Hinton | [ |
| Lipoid acid | 2.0 ± 0.5 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | dihydrolipoic acid + NaOH + AgNO3 + NaBH4 |
| N/A | Growth curves | Luria Bertani | [ |
| PEG | 44 | Nano-sphere | N/A1 | −17.5 | PEG, EDTA, PVP or PVA + AgNO3 + NaOH + NaBH4 in water | N/A | Kirby-Bauer method | Nutrient Agar | [ | |
| “Naked” | 7.5 | Nano-sphere | 9.7 × 10−8 mol/L | −38.0 | AgNO3 + NaBH4 |
| ATCC 29737 | Agar Well diffusion method | Brain Heart Infusion | [ |
| PVA | 10 nm (SEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | −17.0 | Chitosan-Ag NPs also prepared and tested | Clinical isolates | Agar Well diffusion method | Mueller Hinton | [ | |
| Cysteine | 7.6 ± 1.5 | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | AgNO3 + NaBH4 + L-cysteine |
| ATCC 29213 | Microdilution method | Mueller Hinton Cation Adjusted | [ |
| Citrate | 10.2 ± 2.3 | Nano-sphere | N/A | −47.4 | Citrate + tannic acid + AgNO3 |
| MG 1655 | Growth curves | Luria Bertani | [ |
| Citrate | 40 (TEM; 10–70) | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | AgNO3 + citrate |
| DH5α | Agar Well diffusion method | Luria Bertani | [ |
| Lipoid acid | 9.5 ± 1.9 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | −28.6 | Nanocomposix, Europe | Clinical isolates | Plate dilution method | Brucella agar supplemented | [ | |
| Citrate | 15 ± 4 | Nano-sphere | 290 mg/L | −39.8 ± 0.74 | AgNO3 + Citrate + NaBH4 | ATCC 10798 | Microdilution method | Mueller Hinton | [ | |
| Starch | 8 ± 4 (TEM) | Nano-sphere | N/A | N/A | AgNO3 + NaBH4 + (C6H10O5)n |
| N/A | Kirby-Bauer method | Nutrient agar | [ |
| AOT | 20 | “Nano-sphere” | N/A | N/A | Bis(2-ethylhexyl) sulfosuccinate + AgNO3 + ascorbic acid |
| N/A | Microdilution method | Luria Bertani | [ |
N/A: not available; KCCM: Korean Culture Center of Microorganisms; KCTC: Korean Collection of Type Cultures; KACC: Korean Agriculture Culture Collection; MIC: minimal inhibitory concentration; ATCC: American Type Culture Collection; DLS: dynamic light scattering; TKA: Time Kill Assay; TEM: transmission electron microscope; PCM: Polish Collection of Microorganisms; XRD: X-ray diffraction; CGMCC: China General Microbiological Culture Collection Center; MRS: deMan, Rogosa and Sharpe medium; GSH: glutathione; NCTC: National Collection of Type Culture; PEG: polyethylene glycol; CTAB: cetyl-trimethyl ammonium bromide; NTA: nanoparticle tracking analysis; PC: phosphorylcholine; PVA: polyvinyl alcohol; SEM: scanning electron microscope; PVP: polyvinylpyrrolidone; ATCC: American Type Culture Collection; EDTA: ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid; FCM: flow cytometry; MPA: mercaptopropionic acid; MHA: mercaptohexanoic acid; MPS: mercaptopropionic sulfonic acid; HH: Hydroxylamine hypochlorite; SHSH: Sodium hypophosphite and sodium hexametaphosphate; SHST: sodium hypophosphite, sodium hexametaphosphate and sodium tripolyphosphate; AOT: Bis(2-ethylhexyl) sulfosuccinate; * in aqueous medium if not specified.
Figure 1Probable antibacterial mechanisms of action of silver nanoparticles.
Figure 2Bacterial cell wall structures.
Proposed recommendations.
| Nanoparticle Samples | ||
|---|---|---|
| Synthesis | Specification of all chemicals used | [ |
| Characterizations | Metal core size (TEM) | |
| Microbiology | ||
| Antibacterial activity | Specification of the procedure used for antibacterial activity determination: Broth Dilution Procedures (Macrodilution, Microdilution…) Kirby-Bauer Method In accordance with standard and approved denominations | [ |
| Without forgetting to specify growing conditions (temperature and time of incubation, shaking or not) | ||
| Bacteria | Specification of the origin of the bacteria: | |
| Bacterial medium | Mueller Hinton (MH) | |
| Cation-Adjusted MH (CA-MH) | ||