4.8 Article

Inheritance of physico-chemical properties and ROS generation by carbon quantum dots derived from pyrolytically carbonized bacterial sources

Journal

MATERIALS TODAY BIO
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.mtbio.2021.100151

Keywords

Probiotic bacteria; Pathogenic bacteria; Reactive oxygen species; Infrared-spectroscopy; X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy

Funding

  1. European Union [713482]
  2. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [713482] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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This study investigates the inheritance of physico-chemical properties from bacteria in carbon quantum dots, demonstrating that specific reaction temperatures during carbonization can result in the preservation of surface compounds from source bacteria and the generation of carbon quantum dots capable of producing reactive oxygen species.
Bacteria are frequently used in industrial processes and nutrient supplementation to restore a healthy human microflora, but use of live bacteria is often troublesome. Here, we hypothesize that bacterially-derived carbon-quantum-dots obtained through pyrolytic carbonization inherit physico-chemical properties from probiotic and pathogenic source-bacteria. Carbon-quantum-dots carbonized at reaction-temperatures below 200 degrees C had negligible quantum-yields, while temperatures above 220 degrees C yielded poor water-suspendability. Fourier-transform infrared-spectroscopy demonstrated preservation of amide absorption bands in carbon-quantum-dots derived at intermediate temperatures. X-ray photoelectron-spectroscopy indicated that the atWoN in carbon-quantum-dots increased with increasing amounts of protein in source-bacterial surfaces. Carbonization transformed hydrocarbon-like bacterial surface compounds into heterocyclic aromatic-carbon structures, evidenced by a broad infrared absorption band (920-900 cm(-1)) and the presence of carbon in C-C functionalities of carbon-quantum-dots. The chemical composition of bacterially-derived carbon-quantum-dots could be explained by the degradation temperatures of main bacterial cell surface compounds. All carbon-quantum-dots generated reactive-oxygen-species, most notably those derived from probiotic lactobacilli, carrying a high amount of surface protein. Concluding, amide functionalities in carbon-quantum-dots are inherited from surface proteins of source-bacteria, controlling reactive-oxygen-species generation. This paves the way for applications of bacterially-derived carbon-quantum-dots in which reactive-oxygen-species generation is essential, instead of hard-to-use live bacteria, such as in food supplementation or probiotic-assisted antibiotic therapy.

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