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Toxicity Mechanisms of Copper Nanoparticles and Copper Surfaces on Bacterial Cells and Viruses

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241310503

Keywords

antimicrobial copper; copper toxicity; copper mechanisms; antimicrobial agent; antiviral agent; copper nanoparticles

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Copper is a historically used metal to prevent infections and has potential in combating infectious disease outbreaks. Copper nanoparticles and surfaces are common antimicrobial copper-based technologies. The mechanisms explaining their unique antimicrobial properties are not fully understood, but involve membrane rupture, ion accumulation, protein inactivation, and DNA damage. Understanding the toxicity mechanisms of copper nanoparticles and surfaces is important for developing efficient antimicrobial technologies.
Copper is a metal historically used to prevent infections. One of the most relevant challenges in modern society are infectious disease outbreaks, where copper-based technologies can play a significant role. Currently, copper nanoparticles and surfaces are the most common antimicrobial copper-based technologies. Despite the widespread use of copper on nanoparticles and surfaces, the toxicity mechanism(s) explaining their unique antimicrobial properties are not entirely known. In general, toxicity effects described in bacteria and fungi involve the rupture of membranes, accumulation of ions inside the cell, protein inactivation, and DNA damage. A few studies have associated Cu-toxicity with ROS production and genetic material degradation in viruses. Therefore, understanding the mechanisms of the toxicity of copper nanoparticles and surfaces will contribute to developing and implementing efficient antimicrobial technologies to combat old and new infectious agents that can lead to disease outbreaks such as COVID-19. This review summarizes the current knowledge regarding the microbial toxicity of copper nanoparticles and surfaces and the gaps in this knowledge. In addition, we discuss potential applications derived from discovering new elements of copper toxicity, such as using different molecules or modifications to potentiate toxicity or antimicrobial specificity.

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