4.8 Article

Light-Activated Antimicrobial Surfaces Using Industrial Varnish Formulations to Mitigate the Incidence of Nosocomial Infections

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages 7567-7579

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c18930

Keywords

antimicrobial surfaces; cationic polymers; light-responsive; photosensitizer; curcumin; atom transfer radical polymerization

Funding

  1. CNPq (Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico) [202484/2015-7]
  2. Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) [PTDC/CTMPOL/6138/2014]
  3. FEDER funds through the program COMPETE-Programa Operacional Factores de Competitividade
  4. FCT [UIDB/00285/2020, UIBD/00511/2020, REEQ/481/QUI/2006, RECI/QEQQFI/0168/2012, CENTRO-07CT62-FEDER-002012]
  5. FEDER-European Regional Development Fund through the COMPETE Programme (Operational Programme for Competitiveness)
  6. Rede Nacional de Ressona<^>ncia Magnetica Nuclear (RNRMN)

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Research has shown that hospital surfaces are a major route for drug-resistant pathogen-caused nosocomial infections. Industrial waterborne polyurethane varnish formulations containing cationic polymeric biocides and photosensitizer curcumin were developed to create antimicrobial surfaces that can reduce bacterial transmission infections in healthcare environments. The coatings displayed both photokilling effect and a combined antimicrobial effect between the cationic biocide and curcumin, showing potential for practical application.
Evidence has shown that hospital surfaces are one of the major vehicles of nosocomial infections caused by drug-resistant pathogens. Smart surface coatings presenting multiple antimicrobial activity mechanisms have emerged as an advanced approach to safely prevent this type of infection. In this work, industrial waterborne polyurethane varnish formulations containing for the first time cationic polymeric biocides (SPBs) combined with photosensitizer curcumin were developed to afford contact-active and light-responsive antimicrobial surfaces. SPBs were prepared by atom transfer radical polymerization, which allows control over the polymer features that influence antimicrobial efficiency (e.g., molecular weight), while natural curcumin was employed to impart photodynamic activity to the surface. Antibacterial testing against Gram-negative Escherichia coli revealed that glass surfaces coated with the new formulations displayed photokilling effect under white-light (42 mW/cm(2)) irradiation within only 15 min of exposure. In addition, it was observed a combined antimicrobial effect between the two biocides (cationic SPB and curcumin), with a higher reduction in the number of viable bacteria observed for the surfaces containing cationic SPB/curcumin mixtures in comparison with the one obtained for surfaces only with polymer or without biocides. The waterborne industrial varnish formulations allowed the formation of homogeneous films without the need for addition of a coalescing agent, which can be potentially applied in diverse surface substrates to reduce bacterial transmission infections in healthcare environments.

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