4.8 Article

Evaluation of the Antibacterial Activity and Biocompatibility for Silver Nanoparticles Immobilized on Nano Silicate Platelets

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 5, Issue 2, Pages 433-443

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/am302534k

Keywords

nanosilicate platelets (NSP); silver nanoparticles (AgNPs); antibacterial activity; biocompatibility; nanocomposites; polyurethane

Funding

  1. National Research Program for Nanoscience and Technology
  2. National Science Council [100-2120-M-002-006]

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Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are known for their bactericidal abilities. The antibacterial potency is dependent on the particle size and dispersion status. In this study, we synthesized AgNP/NSP nanohybrids in two different weight ratios (1/99 and 8/92) using the fully exfoliated clay, i.e., nanosilicate platelets (NSP), as a dispersing agent and carrier for AgNPs. Due to the size of NSP, the immobilized AgNPs do not enter cells readily, which may lower the risk associated with the cellular uptake of AgNPs. The biocompatibility, immunological response, and antimicrobial activities of AgNP/NSP hybrids were evaluated. The results revealed that AgNP/NSP hybrids elicited merely mild inflammatory response and retained the outstanding antibacterial activity. The hybrids were further embedded in poly(ether)urethane (PEU) to increase the biocompatibility. At the same silver content (20 ppm), the PEU-AgNP/NSP nanocomposites were nontoxic to mouse skin fibroblasts, while simultaneously exhibiting nearly complete bacterial growth reduction (99.9%). PEU containing the same amount office AgNPs did not display such an effect. Our results verify the better biosafety of the AgNPs/NSP hybrids and their polymer nanocomposites for further clinical use.

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