Cationic silver nanoclusters as potent antimicrobials against multidrug-resistant bacteria

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Abstract

Bacterial multidrug resistance (MDR) is a serious healthcare issue caused by the long-term subtherapeutic clinical treatment of infectious diseases. Nanoscale engineering of metal nanoparticles has great potential to address this issue by tuning the nano-bio interface to target bacteria. Herein, we report the use of branched polyethylenimine-functionalized silver nanoclusters (bPEI-Ag NCs) to selectively kill MDR pathogenic bacteria by combining the antimicrobial activity of silver with the selective toxicity of bPEI toward bacteria. The minimum inhibitory concentration of bPEI-Ag NCs was determined against 12 uropathogenic MDR strains and found to be 10- to 15-fold lower than that of PEI and 2- to 3-fold lower than that of AgNO3 alone. Cell viability and hemolysis assays demonstrated the biocompatibility of bPEI-Ag NCs with human fibroblasts and red blood cells, with selective toxicity against MDR bacteria.

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Huma, Z. E., Gupta, A., Javed, I., Das, R., Hussain, S. Z., Mumtaz, S., … Rotello, V. M. (2018). Cationic silver nanoclusters as potent antimicrobials against multidrug-resistant bacteria. ACS Omega, 3(12), 16721–16727. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.8b02438

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