4.8 Article

In Situ Coatings of Silver Nanoparticles for Biofilm Treatment in Implant-Retention Surgeries: Antimicrobial Activities in Monoculture and Coculture

期刊

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
卷 13, 期 35, 页码 41435-41444

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c08239

关键词

bacteria; biofilm; infections; coculture; implants; silver; nanoparticles; polydopamine

资金

  1. Advance Queensland Research Fellowship

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This study focused on a new method for treating and preventing biofilm infections, finding that silver/PDA coatings were effective in reducing Staphylococcus aureus growth in standard bacterial monoculture, but showed lower antimicrobial activity in co-culture with bacteria and osteoblastic cells. These interactions between bacteria and tissue cells surrounding implants may significantly contribute to their resistance to antimicrobial treatment.
Bacterial biofilms are indicated in most medical device-associated infections. Treating these biofilms is challenging yet critically important for applications such as in device-retention surgeries, which can have reinfection rates of up to 80%. This in vitro study centered around our new method of treating biofilm and preventing reinfection. Ionic silver (Ag, in the form of silver nitrate) combined with dopamine and a biofilm-lysing enzyme (aamylase) were applied to model 4-day-old Staphylococcus aureus biofilms on titanium substrates to degrade the extracellular matrix of the biofilm and kill the biofilm bacteria. In this process, the oxidative self-polymerization of dopamine converted Ag ions into Ag nanoparticles that, together with the resultant self-adhering polydopamine (PDA), formed coatings that strongly bound to the treated substrates. Surprisingly, although these Ag/PDA coatings significantly reduced S. aureus growth in standard bacterial monoculture, they showed much lower antimicrobial activity in coculture of the bacteria and osteoblastic MC3T3-E1 cells in which the bacteria were also found attached to the osteoblasts. This S. aureus- osteoblast interaction was also linked to bacterial survival against gentamicin treatment observed in coculture. Our study thus provided clear evidence suggesting that bacteria's interactions with tissue cells surrounding implants may significantly contribute to their resistance to antimicrobial treatment.

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