Photothermal therapy based on conjugated polymers represents a promising antibacterial strategy but still possesses notable limitations. Herein, degradable pseudo conjugated polymers (PCPs) containing photothermal molecular backbones and reactive oxygen species (ROS)-sensitive thioketal bonds are designed. Triphenylphosphine (PPh3) is introduced into PCPs to generate phosphonium-based PCPs (pPCPs), which further assembled with hyaluronic acid into pPCP nanoparticles (pPCP-NPs). pPCP-NPs with quaternary phosphonium cations selectively anchor on and destroy bacterial cell membranes through electrostatic action. Under 1064 nm laser irradiation, pPCP-NPs (pPCP-NPs/+L) produce near-infrared-II (NIR-II) photothermal antibacterial effect, thereby killing bacteria in a sustained manner. pPCP-NPs are readily degraded upon ROS abundant at infection sites, therefore exhibiting enough biosafety. pPCP-NPs/+L display an almost 100% bacterial inhibition rate in vitro and resultin a nearly complete recovery of bacteria-induced mouse wounds. A further metabolomics analysis denotes that pPCP-NPs/+L work in a concerted way to induce bacterial DNA damage, inhibit bacterial carbon/nitrogen utilization and amino acid/nucleotide synthesis. Taken together, degradable pPCP-NPs with both NIR-II photothermal effect and cationic phosphonium structural bacteriostasis provide a new avenue for antibiotics-alternative anti-infection therapy.
CITATION STYLE
Zhou, H., Tang, D., Kang, X., Yuan, H., Yu, Y., Xiong, X., … Zhou, D. (2022). Degradable Pseudo Conjugated Polymer Nanoparticles with NIR-II Photothermal Effect and Cationic Quaternary Phosphonium Structural Bacteriostasis for Anti-Infection Therapy. Advanced Science, 9(16). https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202200732
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