Bacterial metabolite-directed synthesis of biogenic TiO2–Zn nanocomposites: characterization and multifunctional biomedical evaluation
Abstract
This study synthesized TiO2–Zn nanocomposites using metabolites from Red Sea-isolated Bacillus tequilensis MYG163 and evaluated their multifunctional therapeutic potential. Chronic diseases such as diabetes, infections, and inflammation share overlapping pathological mechanisms that single-target therapies cannot adequately manage. XRD analysis confirmed the presence of anatase TiO2 and wurtzite ZnO phases with crystallite sizes of 23.1 and 23.7 nm, respectively, in the TiO2–Zn nanocomposite. TEM analysis revealed spherical particles with sizes ranging from 8 to 15 nm, while DLS analysis indicated a hydrodynamic diameter of 87.3 nm and a polydispersity index of 0.232. EDX analysis indicated the presence of Ti (32.1 wt%), Zn (29.2 wt%), and O (33.8 wt%) and a zeta potential of −34.5 mV, confirming colloidal stability. Hemolysis remained below 0.7% across all concentrations tested (50–1000 µg mL−1), confirming blood compatibility, essential for biomedical applications. DPPH and ABTS radical scavenging assays yielded IC50 values of 11.97 and 7.65 µg mL−1, respectively. Anti-inflammatory testing demonstrated preferential COX-2 inhibition (IC50 = 14.13 µg mL−1) over COX-1 (IC50 = 25.91 µg mL−1), representing a therapeutically favorable selectivity profile that minimizes gastrointestinal side effects associated with nonselective inhibition as well as prevents BSA denaturation (IC50 = 2.78 µg mL−1). Antimicrobial assays showed inhibition zones of 35 ± 0.4 mm (B. subtilis), 33 ± 0.5 mm (C. albicans), 26 ± 0.3 mm (S. typhi), 25 ± 1.0 mm (K. pneumoniae), 25 ± 0.6 mm (F. oxysporum), and 22 ± 0.4 mm (MRSA), with activities matching or exceeding those of reference antibiotics and antifungals against several tested organisms. Antidiabetic screening revealed the inhibition of α-amylase and α-glucosidase with IC50 values of 12.98 and 9.34 µg mL−1, respectively. Marine bacterial metabolites functioned as reducing and stabilizing agents, yielding nanocomposites with multitarget therapeutic properties spanning oxidative, inflammatory, microbial, and metabolic pathways.

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