Abstract
The development of antibiotic resistance and the resulting emergence of multidrug-resistant bacteria
has become one of the main threats in the public health system, commonly leading to nosocomial
infections. Many researchers have turned their focus to developing alternative classes of antibacterial
systems based on various nanomaterials. We have developed an antibiotic-free nanoparticle
system, inspired by naturally occurring bacteriophages, to fight antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Our
phage-mimicking nanoparticles (PhaNPs) display structural mimicry of protein-turret distribution on
the head structure of bacteriophages. By mimicking phages, we are able to take advantage of their
evolutionary constant shape and their high antibacterial activity while avoiding immune reactions of
the human body, potentially caused by phages. We describe the synthesis of hierarchically arranged
core-shell nanoparticles, with a silica core conjugated with silver-coated gold nanospheres. Improving
on our previous design, we have chemisorbed the synthetic antimicrobial peptide Syn-larvacin
71 on the PhaNP surface which further increases the antibacterial activity of the nanoparticles
(PhaNP@Syn71). The antibacterial effect of the PhaNP@Syn71 was tested in vitro and in vivo
against Streptococcus pyogenes, a causative agent for strep throat, impetigo, and more invasive
diseases. In vitro results showed delayed growth as well as inhibition of bacterial growth (up to
99%). Cytocompatibility testing on HaCaT human skin keratinocytes showed minimal cytotoxicity
of PhaNP@Syn71, being comparable to the vehicle cytotoxicity levels even at higher concentrations,
thus, proving that our design is biocompatible with human cells. Studies on a mouse wound infection
model exhibited high biocompatibility in in vivo settings while showing immediate stabilization of
the wound infection following the first dose of PhaNP@Syn71. Our results suggest the strong utility of antimicrobial peptide-conjugated phage-mimicking nanoparticles as a highly effective antibacterial system that can combat a clinically relevant bacterial pathogen.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Information: Peptide-conjugated phage-mimicking nanoparticles exhibit potent antibacterial action against Streptococcus pyogenes in murine wound infection models
Description
ICP-OES data for elemental analysis
DLS and Zeta potential measurement of nanoparticles
Wound healing in mice when only topical formulation was used
ICP-OES for elemental analysis and quantification of nanoparticles biodistribution in mice
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