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Photodynamically Active Electrospun Fibers for Antibiotic-Free Infection Control
- Source :
- ACS Applied Bio Materials. 2:4258-4270
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- American Chemical Society (ACS), 2019.
-
Abstract
- Antimicrobial biomaterials are critical to aid in the regeneration of oral soft tissue and prevent or treat localised bacterial infections. With the rising trend in antibiotic resistance, there is a pressing clinical need for new antimicrobial chemistries and biomaterial design approaches enabling on-demand activation of antibiotic-free antimicrobial functionality following an infection that are environment-friendly, flexible and commercially-viable. This study explores the feasibility of integrating a bioresorbable electrospun polymer scaffold with localised antimicrobial photodynamic therapy (aPDT) capability. To enable aPDT, we encapsulated a photosensitiser (PS) in polyester fibres in the PS inert state, so that the antibacterial function would be activated on-demand via a visible light source. Fibrous scaffolds were successfully electrospun from FDA-approved polyesters, either poly(epsilon-caprolactone (PCL) or poly[(rac-lactide)-co-glycolide] (PLGA) with encapsulated PS (either methylene blue (MB) or erythrosin B (ER)). The electrospun fibres achieved an ~100 wt.% loading efficiency of PS, which significantly increased their tensile modulus and reduced their average fibre diameter and pore size with respect to PS-free controls. In vitro, PS release varied between a burst release profile to limited release within 100 hours depending on the selected scaffold formulation. Exposure of PS-encapsulated PCL fibres to visible light successfully led to at least a 1 log reduction in E. coli viability after 60 minutes of light exposure whereas PS-free electrospun controls did not inactive microbes. This study successfully demonstrates the significant potential of PS-encapsulated electrospun fibres as photodynamically active biomaterial for antibiotic-free infection control.
- Subjects :
- Scaffold
Regeneration (biology)
medicine.medical_treatment
Biochemistry (medical)
technology, industry, and agriculture
Biomedical Engineering
Biomaterial
Quantitative Biology - Tissues and Organs
Photodynamic therapy
General Chemistry
Antimicrobial
Biomaterials
Polyester
PLGA
chemistry.chemical_compound
chemistry
FOS: Biological sciences
medicine
Tissues and Organs (q-bio.TO)
Methylene blue
Biomedical engineering
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 25766422
- Volume :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- ACS Applied Bio Materials
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....65aff5ed5e257ce9c3eb7734e19421f0
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/acsabm.9b00543