4.7 Article

Preventing the spread of life-threatening gastrointestinal microbes on the surface of a continuously self-disinfecting block polymer

Journal

JOURNAL OF COLLOID AND INTERFACE SCIENCE
Volume 652, Issue -, Pages 718-726

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcis.2023.08.088

Keywords

Anionic block polymer; Clostridioides difficile; Candida auris; Candida albicans; Antimicrobial; Self-disinfecting; Broad-spectrum; Infection prevention

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This study found that a self-disinfecting anionic block polymer can rapidly inactivate drug-resistant and transmissible healthcare pathogens such as C. difficile and C. auris on a solid surface. The polymer generates a highly acidic (pH < 1) surface layer upon hydration, allowing proton migration from the film's interior to the surface through contiguous nanoscale hydrophilic channels. The polymer effectively inactivates C. difficile and Candida, preventing the spread of these potentially dangerous microbes in healthcare facilities.
Highly persistent, drug-resistant and transmissible healthcare pathogens such as Clostridioides difficile (C. difficile) and Candida auris (C. auris) are responsible for causing antibiotic-associated fatal diarrhea and invasive candidiasis, respectively. In this study, we demonstrate that these potentially lethal gastrointestinal microbes can be rapidly inactivated on the solid surface of a self-disinfecting anionic block polymer that inherently generates a water surface layer that is highly acidic (pH < 1) upon hydration. Due to thermodynamic incompatibility between its chemical sequences, the polymer spontaneously self-organizes into a nanostructure that enables proton migration from the interior of a film to the surface via contiguous nanoscale hydrophilic channels, as discerned here by scanning electron and atomic force microscopies, as well as X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Here, we report that two strains of C. difficile in the vegetative state and two species of Candida, Candida albicans (C. albicans) and C. auris, are, in most cases, inactivated to the limit of minimum detection. Corresponding electron and optical microscopy images reveal that, upon exposure to the hydrated polymer, the outer microbial membranes display evidence of damage and intracellular material is expelled. Combined with our previous studies of rapid bacterial and viral inactivation, these antimicrobial results are highly encouraging and, if translatable to clinical conditions in the form of self-standing polymer films or coatings, are expected to benefit the welfare of patients in healthcare facilities by continuously preventing the spread of such potentially dangerous microbes.

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