4.8 Article

Rational collaborative ablation of bacterial biofilms ignited by physical cavitation and concurrent deep antibiotic release

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 262, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2020.120341

Keywords

Bacterial biofilm; Deep penetration; Antibiotic release; Nanodroplets; Cavitation

Funding

  1. National Natural Scientific Foundation of China [51973071]
  2. Science and Technology Program of Guangzhou [2019050001]
  3. Natural Science Foundation for Distinguished Young Scholars of Guangdong Province [2016A030306013]
  4. Pearl River Young Talents Program of Science and Technology in Guangzhou [201906010047]
  5. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFA0209800]

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Bacteria biofilm has extracellular polymeric substances to protect bacteria from external threats, which is a stubborn problem for human health. Herein, a kind of gasifiable nanodroplet is fabricated to ablate Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) biofilm. Upon NIR pulsed laser irradiation, the nanodroplets can gasify to generate destructive gas shockwave, which further potentiates initial acoustic cavitation effect, thus synergistically disrupting the protective biofilm and killing resident bacteria. More importantly, the gasification can further promote antibiotic release in deep biofilm for residual bacteria eradication. The nanodmplets not only exhibit deep biofilm penetration capacity and high potency to ablate biofilms, but also good biocompatibility without detectable side effects. In vivo mouse implant model indicates that the nanodroplets can accumulate at the S. aureus infected implant sites. Upon pulsed laser treatment, the nanodroplets efficiently eradicate bacteria biofilm in implanted catheter by synergistic contribution of gas shockwave-enhanced cavitation and deep antibiotic release. Current phase changeable nanodmplets with synergistic physical and chemical therapeutic modalities are promising to combat complex bacterial biofilms with drug resistance, which provides an alternative visual angle for biofilm inhibition in biomedicine.

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