4.8 Article

Biofilm-Responsive Polymeric Nanoparticles with Self-Adaptive Deep Penetration for In Vivo Photothermal Treatment of Implant Infection

Journal

CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
Volume 32, Issue 18, Pages 7725-7738

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.0c02055

Keywords

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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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Biofilm can protect bacteria from immune attacks and antibiotic inhibition, and bacterial biofilm hosted in implanted materials and medical devices is a serious threat for modern medical system. Herein, we report biofilm-responsive caged guanidine nanoparticles (CGNs) to deeply penetrate and accumulate in bacterial biofilm, and then efficient photothermal eradication of bacterial biofilm is achieved upon NIR laser irradiation via the proof-of-concept formulation of photothermal agents in CGNs. In physiological conditions and blood circulation, CGNs are negatively charged by masking the positive charge of guanidine via covalent modification with acid-cleavable moieties, exhibiting high biocompatibility and minimal hemolysis. Whereas upon blood circulation and passive accumulation at infected implant sites, CGNs are self-adaptive in acidic biofilm to release the protective caging group and expose native guanidine moieties, which can promote nanoparticle deep biofilm penetration and bacteria adhesion as well as membrane fusion. After that, remarkable photothermal effect with a high photothermal conversion efficiency of similar to 40.9% can eradicate implant biofilm upon NIR laser irradiation. It can efficiently treat S. aureus biofilm-infected implant catheters in vivo via only one single treatment in a mouse model, exhibiting similar to 99.6% bacteria inhibition ratio. Apart from this proof-of-concept work, current guanidine-caged biofilm responsive polymeric nanoparticles are promising general vectors to treat biofilm and resistant pathogens in medicine and daily healthcare.

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