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Sunflower pollen-derived microcapsules adsorb light and bacteria for enhanced antimicrobial photothermal therapy.

Authors :
Yang Y
Wang B
Liu Q
Wei Z
Mou Z
Li Q
Chen C
You Z
Li BL
Wang G
Xu Z
Qian H
Source :
Nanoscale [Nanoscale] 2024 May 02; Vol. 16 (17), pp. 8378-8389. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 May 02.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Bacterial infection is one of the most serious clinical complications, with life-threatening outcomes. Nature-inspired biomaterials offer appealing microscale and nanoscale architectures that are often hard to fabricate by traditional technologies. Inspired by the light-harvesting nature, we engineered sulfuric acid-treated sunflower sporopollenin exine-derived microcapsules (HSECs) to capture light and bacteria for antimicrobial photothermal therapy. Sulfuric acid-treated HSECs show a greatly enhanced photothermal performance and a strong bacteria-capturing ability against Gram-positive bacteria. This is attributed to the hierarchical micro/nanostructure and surface chemistry alteration of HSECs. To test the potential for clinical application, an in situ bacteria-capturing, near-infrared (NIR) light-triggered hydrogel made of HSECs and curdlan is applied in photothermal therapy for infected skin wounds. HSECs and curdlan suspension that spread on bacteria-infected skin wounds of mice first capture the local bacteria and then form hydrogels on the wound upon NIR light stimulation. The combination shows a superior antibacterial efficiency of 98.4% compared to NIR therapy alone and achieved a wound healing ratio of 89.4%. The current study suggests that the bacteria-capturing ability and photothermal properties make HSECs an excellent platform for the phototherapy of bacteria-infected diseases. Future work that can fully take advantage of the hierarchical micro/nanostructure of HSECs for multiple biomedical applications is highly promising and desirable.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2040-3372
Volume :
16
Issue :
17
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nanoscale
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38602041
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d3nr04814d