Issue 17, 2024

Sunflower pollen-derived microcapsules adsorb light and bacteria for enhanced antimicrobial photothermal therapy

Abstract

Bacterial infection is one of the most serious clinical complications, with life-threatening outcomes. Nature-inspired biomaterials offer appealing microscale and nanoscale architectures that are often hard to fabricate by traditional technologies. Inspired by the light-harvesting nature, we engineered sulfuric acid-treated sunflower sporopollenin exine-derived microcapsules (HSECs) to capture light and bacteria for antimicrobial photothermal therapy. Sulfuric acid-treated HSECs show a greatly enhanced photothermal performance and a strong bacteria-capturing ability against Gram-positive bacteria. This is attributed to the hierarchical micro/nanostructure and surface chemistry alteration of HSECs. To test the potential for clinical application, an in situ bacteria-capturing, near-infrared (NIR) light-triggered hydrogel made of HSECs and curdlan is applied in photothermal therapy for infected skin wounds. HSECs and curdlan suspension that spread on bacteria-infected skin wounds of mice first capture the local bacteria and then form hydrogels on the wound upon NIR light stimulation. The combination shows a superior antibacterial efficiency of 98.4% compared to NIR therapy alone and achieved a wound healing ratio of 89.4%. The current study suggests that the bacteria-capturing ability and photothermal properties make HSECs an excellent platform for the phototherapy of bacteria-infected diseases. Future work that can fully take advantage of the hierarchical micro/nanostructure of HSECs for multiple biomedical applications is highly promising and desirable.

Graphical abstract: Sunflower pollen-derived microcapsules adsorb light and bacteria for enhanced antimicrobial photothermal therapy

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Sep 2023
Accepted
25 Mar 2024
First published
26 Mar 2024

Nanoscale, 2024,16, 8378-8389

Sunflower pollen-derived microcapsules adsorb light and bacteria for enhanced antimicrobial photothermal therapy

Y. Yang, B. Wang, Q. Liu, Z. Wei, Z. Mou, Q. Li, C. Chen, Z. You, B. L. Li, G. Wang, Z. Xu and H. Qian, Nanoscale, 2024, 16, 8378 DOI: 10.1039/D3NR04814D

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