4.8 Article

Selenium Silk Nanostructured Films with Antifungal and Antibacterial Activity

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c21013

Keywords

antibacterial and antifungal biomaterials; self-assembly; nanostructured films; selenium nanoparticles; silk fibroin; biocompatible materials; antimicrobial biomaterials

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The emergence of drug-resistant bacteria and fungi is a global concern in healthcare. Developing effective small molecule therapeutic strategies is challenging, thus, exploring biomaterials with physical modes of action is an alternative approach. In this study, silk-based films embedded with selenium nanoparticles were found to exhibit antibacterial and antifungal properties while remaining biocompatible and noncytotoxic towards mammalian cells.
The rapid emergence of drug-resistant bacteria and fungi poses a threat for healthcare worldwide. The development of novel effective small molecule therapeutic strategies in this space has remained challenging. Therefore, one orthogonal approach is to explore biomaterials with physical modes of action that have the potential to generate antimicrobial activity and, in some cases, even prevent antimicrobial resistance. Here, to this effect, we describe an approach for forming silk-based films that contain embedded selenium nanoparticles. We show that these materials exhibit both antibacterial and antifungal properties while crucially also remaining highly biocompatible and noncytotoxic toward mammalian cells. By incorporating the nanoparticles into silk films, the protein scaffold acts in a 2-fold manner; it protects the mammalian cells from the cytotoxic effects of the bare nanoparticles, while also providing a template for bacterial and fungal eradication. A range of hybrid inorganic/organic films were produced and an optimum concentration was found, which allowed for both high bacterial and fungal death while also exhibiting low mammalian cell cytotoxicity. Such films can thus pave the way for next-generation antimicrobial materials for applications such as wound healing and as agents against topical infections, with the added benefit that bacteria and fungi are unlikely to develop antimicrobial resistance to these hybrid materials.

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