| Literature DB >> 31967794 |
Abhishek Gupta1,2, Sophie M Briffa3, Sam Swingler4, Hazel Gibson4,2, Vinodh Kannappan2, Grazyna Adamus5, Marek Kowalczuk5, Claire Martin6, Iza Radecka4,2.
Abstract
Chronic wounds are often recalcitrant to treatment because of high microbial bioburden and the problem of microbial resistance. Silver is a broad-spectrum natural antimicrobial agent with wide applications extending to proprietary wound dressings. Recently, silver nanoparticles have attracted attention in wound management. In the current study, the green synthesis of nanoparticles was accomplished using a natural reducing agent, curcumin, which is a natural polyphenolic compound that is well-known as a wound-healing agent. The hydrophobicity of curcumin was overcome by its microencapsulation in cyclodextrins. This study demonstrates the production, characterization of silver nanoparticles using aqueous curcumin:hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin complex and loading them into bacterial cellulose hydrogel with moist wound-healing properties. These silver nanoparticle-loaded bacterial cellulose hydrogels were characterized for wound-management applications. In addition to high cytocompatibility, these novel dressings exhibited antimicrobial activity against three common wound-infecting pathogenic microbes Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Candida auris.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31967794 PMCID: PMC7588018 DOI: 10.1021/acs.biomac.9b01724
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomacromolecules ISSN: 1525-7797 Impact factor: 6.988
Figure 1Characterization of cAgNP produced using CUR:HPβCD. (a,b) TEM photomicrographs. (c) Size distribution as measured by TEM analysis and calculated with 100 nanoparticles. (d) DLS data of cAgNP with size distribution.
Figure 2SEM photomicrographs of (a) unwashed BC, entangled G. xylinus highlighted. (b) BC after purification. (c,d) cAgNP loaded in BC fiber network.
Figure 3EDX spectrum of cAgNP-loaded BC.
Figure 4Cytocompatibility test results. (a) Bar graph showing the cell viability (%) after 24 h exposure to cAgNP-loaded BC and free cAgNP (equivalent amount) (n = 8). Representative photomicrographs of cells (10× magnification) after exposure to cAgNP-loaded BC and free cAgNP for 24 h.
Figure 5Antimicrobial disc diffusion assay results for PBS-loaded BC, HPβCD-loaded BC, and cAgNP-loaded BC against P. aeruginosa, S. aureus, and C. auris at 24 h (n = 10; error bars = SD).
Figure 6Photomicrographs with the visual appearance of (a) BC loaded with PBS (b) cAgNP-loaded BC hydrogel pellicle.