材料科学
苯酚
活性氧
纳米技术
抗菌活性
试剂
酚醛树脂
酚类
组合化学
化学工程
细菌
有机化学
化学
生物化学
生物
遗传学
工程类
作者
Pei Liu,Yuzheng Wu,Babak Mehrjou,Kaiwei Tang,Guomin Wang,Paul K. Chu
标识
DOI:10.1002/adfm.202110635
摘要
Abstract Gold nanoparticles (GNPs) with oxidase and peroxidase properties are great candidates for antibiotic‐mimicking materials due to reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. However, the bioenzymic properties are not long‐lasting due to the short lifespan of ROS and have only been observed from GNPs with a size of less than 20 nm, thus making the synthesis laborious and inefficient. Herein, GNPs with controllable size and effective ROS utilization are synthesized by an environmentally green process using natural phenols extracted from plants as the reducing and capping reagent. Functional metallic ions are chelated by taking advantage of the coordinating properties of phenols to form the versatile nanoframe (pGNP‐Fe) that can self‐assemble onto bacteria due to the inherent attraction rendered by phenols, and the physical pressure causes bacterial membrane damage. During internalization in bacteria, the cascade process resulting from the enzyme‐like properties generates cytotoxic reactive ROS via oxidization, and the Fenton reaction enhances the antibacterial efficiency. This dual physical/chemical antibacterial process obviates the need for external antibiotics and antibacterial agents, which may otherwise pose toxicity in vivo. The fabrication strategy and materials properties described here provide insights into the design of antibiotic‐mimicking materials based on enzymatic and physical effects.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI