Antibacterial carbon dots integrating multiple mechanisms for selective Gram-positive bacteria elimination and infected wound healing acceleration

Abstract

The escalating prevalence of multidrug-resistant Gram-positive bacterial infections demands the development of antimicrobial agents with precise targeting and rapid bactericidal activity. In this study, ultra-small positively-charged carbon dots (PR-CDs) were synthesized through a one-step hydrothermal synthesis of polyethyleneimine and Rhodamine B. The resulting PR-CDs exhibited multiple antibacterial mechanisms: (1) electrostatic attraction to Gram-positive bacterial membranes, (2) cellular internalization enabled by their ultra-small size (2.3 nm), and (3) visible light-activated reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. PR-CDs have shown selective bactericidal activity against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and other Gram-positive pathogens with minimum bactericidal concentrations as low as 19.53 μg mL−1 under light irradiation. Mechanistic studies revealed that the positive charges on the surface of PR-CDs facilitated selective binding to teichoic acid-rich Gram-positive cell walls, while their nanoscale dimensions permitted deep penetration into bacterial cells, enhancing oxidative damage through rapid generation of singlet oxygen (1O2). Encapsulation of PR-CDs in gellan gum (PR-CDs@GG) hydrogels enabled sustained ROS release and accelerated MRSA-infected wound healing in MRSA-infected mice, achieving 82.51% wound closure within 8 days without systemic toxicity. This work establishes a paradigm for precision antimicrobial design via integrating targeted binding, cellular penetration, and photodynamic activation.

Graphical abstract: Antibacterial carbon dots integrating multiple mechanisms for selective Gram-positive bacteria elimination and infected wound healing acceleration

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Apr 2025
Accepted
08 Aug 2025
First published
26 Aug 2025

J. Mater. Chem. B, 2025, Advance Article

Antibacterial carbon dots integrating multiple mechanisms for selective Gram-positive bacteria elimination and infected wound healing acceleration

M. Fang, L. Lin, L. Lin, Y. Lin, M. Zheng, J. Zhang, W. Liu and Q. Huang, J. Mater. Chem. B, 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5TB00754B

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