4.8 Article

Broad-Spectrum Antimicrobial Supramolecular Assemblies with Distinctive Size and Shape

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 6, Issue 10, Pages 9191-9199

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn3035217

Keywords

supramolecular assemblies; biodegradable polymers; antimicrobial; broad-spectrum activity; clinically isolated microbes; multidrug resistance

Funding

  1. IBM Almaden Research Center (USA)
  2. Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology (Singapore)
  3. Eindhoven University of Technology (The Netherlands)
  4. Zhejiang University (China)
  5. Medical University of South Carolina (USA)

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With the increased prevalence of antibiotic-resistant infections, there Is an urgent need for innovative antimicrobial treatments. One such area being actively explored is the use of self-assembling cationic polymers. This relatively new class of materials was inspired by biologically pervasive cationic host defense peptides. The antimicrobial action of both the synthetic polymers and naturally occurring peptides is believed to be complemented by their three-dimensional structure. In an effort to evaluate shape effects on antimicrobial materials, triblock polymers were polymerized from an assembly directing terephthalamide-bisurea core. Simple changes to this core, such as the addition of a methylene spacer, served to direct self-assembly into distinct morphologies-spheres and rods. Computational modeling also demonstrated how subtle core change! could directly alter urea stacking motifs manifesting in unique multidirectional hydrogen-bond networks despite the vast majority of material consisting of poly(lactide) (interior block) and cationic polycarbonates (exterior block). Upon testing the spherical and rod-like morphologies for antimicrobial properties, it was found that both possessed broad-spectrum activity (Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria as well as fungi) with minimal hemolysis, although only the rod-like assemblies were effective against Candida albicans.

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