Antimicrobial bionanocomposite-from precursors to the functional material in one simple step

Abstract

The mesoporous biosilica with unique 3D hierarchy in/organic functional groups is attractive material in terms of interfacial phenomena, and its high biocompatibility accelerates development in biomedical devices. In addition, their benefits also play a fundamental role in antimicrobial assessment. We hypothesize that the Diadesmis gallica biosilica surface acts as a biotemplate for AgCl and Au nanoparticle (NP) biosynthesis. Moreover, it exhibits antibacterial action human pathogenic bacteria. Nanoparticle biosynthesis was performed via a pure environmental-friendly, static, bottom-up in vitro regime. Minimal inhibitory concentrations evaluated systems with bionanocomposites for antibacterial efficiency in temporal time-dose-dependency. TEM and XRD depicts a biosilica "local sphere" which affects formation, stabilization and encapsulation of crystalline Au (9-27 nm) and AgCl (3-51 nm) NPs in one simple step. FTIR analysis reveals various functional in/organic groups, including Si-OH and polyamides. While both metal-bionanoparticles have analogical spherical shape with determined aggregation, ICP-AES analysis determined more effective 5.29 wt% Au NP formation than 1 wt% AgCl NPs. MIC analysis confirms that bionanocomposite with AgCl by concentration 0.014 mg/mL has the most effective antibacterial system for gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria strains. Although dual effect of Au/AgCl NP bionanocomposite has almost analogical influence on gram-positive bacteria, the synergic-antagonistic effect is irrelevant in this instance.

Description

Subject(s)

Diadesmis gallica, diatoms, AgCl nanoparticles, Au nanoparticles, antibacterial, minimum inhibitory concentration, health effects

Citation

Journal of Nanoparticle Research. 2016, vol. 18, issue 12, art. no. 368.