Marianne
Marchioni
a,
Giulia
Veronesi
ab,
Isabelle
Worms‡
ac,
Wai Li
Ling
d,
Thomas
Gallon
ae,
Didier
Leonard
f,
Christelle
Gateau
e,
Mireille
Chevallet
a,
Pierre-Henri
Jouneau
g,
Laura
Carlini
h,
Chiara
Battocchio
h,
Pascale
Delangle
e,
Isabelle
Michaud-Soret
*a and
Aurélien
Deniaud
*a
aUniv. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, CEA, IRIG, Laboratoire de Chimie et Biologie des Métaux, 38000 Grenoble, France. E-mail: aurelien.deniaud@cea.fr; isabelle.michaud-soret@cea.fr; Tel: +33 4 38 78 96 51 Tel: +33 4 38 78 99 40
bESRF, The European Synchrotron, 71 Avenue des Martyrs, 38000 Grenoble, France
cUniv. Grenoble Alpes, CEA, LITEN/DTNM/SEN/L2N, F-38054 Grenoble Cedex 09, France
dUniv. Grenoble Alpes, CEA, CNRS, IBS, F-38000 Grenoble, France
eUniv. Grenoble Alpes, CEA, CNRS, IRIG, SyMMES, 38000 Grenoble, France
fUniv. Lyon, CNRS, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Institut des Sciences Analytiques, UMR 5280, 5, rue de la Doua, F-69100 Villeurbanne, France
gUniv. Grenoble Alpes, CEA, IRIG, MEM, 38000 Grenoble, France
hUniv. Roma Tre, Dept. of Sciences, Via della Vasca Navale 79, 00146 Rome, Italy
First published on 11th November 2019
Silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) are efficient biocides increasingly used in consumer products and medical devices. Their activity is due to their capacity to release bioavailable Ag(I) ions making them long-lasting biocides but AgNPs themselves are usually easily released from the product. Besides, AgNPs are highly sensitive to various chemical environments that triggers their transformation, decreasing their activity. Altogether, widespread use of AgNPs leads to bacterial resistance and safety concerns for humans and the environment. There is thus a crucial need for improvement. Herein, a proof of concept for a novel biocide based on AgNP assemblies bridged together by a tri-thiol bioinspired ligand is presented. The final nanomaterial is stable and less sensitive to chemical environments with AgNPs completely covered by organic molecules tightly bound via their thiol functions. Therefore, these AgNP assemblies can be considered as safer-by-design and innovative biocides, since they deliver a sufficient amount of Ag(I) for biocidal activity with no release of AgNPs, which are insensitive to transformations in the nanomaterial.
New conceptsA new concept of mesoscopic materials with nano-properties is developed. It consists of an assembly of silver nanoparticles bridged together by a bio-inspired molecule covalently bonded to the nanoparticle surface through its three thiol functions. This results in a material that can release silver ions in a slow and controlled manner, in contrast to the existing nano-enabled biocides currently employed in consumer products and medical devices, in which silver nanoparticles undergo uncontrolled release. Thus, silver nanoparticle assemblies can be the building blocks of future nano-enabled biocides conceived from a safer-by-design perspective, where the amount of released ions is reduced to an amount required to kill bacteria, while avoiding unnecessary Ag leaching from the nanoparticle. The proof of concept of the self-assembly process and surface science insights into the assembly mechanism are provided, as well as the demonstration of the biocidal activity of the resulting nanomaterial. |
Fig. 1 L3S-induced AgNP assemblies. (a) Chemical structure of the tripodal molecule L3S. (b) Time-dependent evolution of the color of the AgNP–L3S mixture between 0 and 24 hours. (c) Time-dependent analysis of AgNP SPR spectra in the presence of L3S between 0 and 75 min of incubation at a S:Ag molar ratio of 1:1. (d) Time-dependent evolution of the hydrodynamic diameter distribution of the species in a solution containing AgNP and L3S at a S:Ag molar ratio of 1:1 and between 0 and 75 min of incubation. The average diameter is written on top of each peak. (e) AgNP dissolution into Ag(I) species in the presence of GSH (denoted as “S-GSH”) or L3S (denoted as “S-L3S”). Time-dependent measurement of the amount of Ag into the soluble fraction determined by ICP-AES. This amount corresponds to the fraction of the sample recovered in the supernatant of the sucrose cushion centrifugation (see Experimental section in ESI†). (f) AF4 analysis of AgNPs in the presence of L3S. Fractograms of species from AgNPs incubated alone for 0 or 24 hours and with L3S for 1, 2 or 4 hours. The detection is based on 107Ag by ICP-MS. In all experiments, t = 0 corresponds to the AgNP alone in solution. |
Thiol molecules were previously demonstrated to favor AgNP dissolution into Ag(I) soluble species with kinetics increasing with the number of thiol per molecule.9 Indeed, phytochelatin-3, a tri-thiol molecule, induced an almost four times faster dissolution than glutathione, our standard one thiol molecule. Surprisingly, similar experiments performed with the tri-thiol molecule L3S showed a slightly slower AgNP dissolution compared to the reaction with glutathione leading to a lower amount of Ag(I) released after 24 h incubation (Fig. 1e). In order to have a complete view of the different species produced over time, asymmetrical flow-field flow-fractionation (AF4) experiments were performed with online detection of Ag by inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) (Fig. 1f). Pristine AgNPs alone were eluted at 15 min retention time and remained stable in solution over 24 h. The incubation with L3S led to (i) the decrease of the AgNP peak (15 min) over time, (ii) the appearance of a peak at lower retention time around 11 min that corresponded to Ag(I) soluble species and (iii) the appearance of a broad peak corresponding to assemblies at a higher retention time, the latter increasing with the incubation duration. These results highlight the time-dependent formation of large assemblies of AgNPs triggered by L3S. Moreover, the kinetics of the process can gradually be slowed down by decreasing the S to Ag molar ratio to 0.25 and 0.05, as shown by SPR spectra and dynamic light scattering (DLS) distributions (Fig. S1, ESI†). To control the assembly process, further experiments were performed with an S to Ag molar ratio of 0.25 and using iodoacetamide, a thiol-reactive molecule that alkylates and blocks free thiol functions. When added after 1 h of incubation between AgNPs and L3S, the evolution of both SPR spectra and DLS distributions was stopped and the assemblies were stable for at least 120 h at 25 °C (Fig. 2a, bvs.Fig. 1c, d). This proves that the AgNP assembly is thiol-driven and is not an agglomeration mechanism, which would be insensitive to iodoacetamide but sensitive to dilution, as observed with oxidized glutathione (Fig. S2, ESI†).
Fig. 2 AgNP assemblies: production, purification and characterization. (a) Time-dependent analysis of AgNP SPR spectra in the presence of L3S between 0 and 120 hours of incubation at a S:Ag molar ratio of 0.25:1. The reaction between AgNPs and L3S occurs for 1 hour, then iodoacetamide is added at 100 μM for a thiol concentration of 90 μM. SPR spectra were acquired up to 120 hours of the total incubation time. (b) In a set-up similar to (a), hydrodynamic diameter distribution of the species in solution was determined for the AgNPs alone (t = 0), at t = 1 h (time for the addition of iodoacetamide) and then at t = 3, 4 and 96 hours. (c) Hydrodynamic diameter distribution of different populations of assemblies separated by discontinuous sucrose gradient centrifugation. Three different populations were recovered: “Assemblies-40 nm” corresponds to assemblies of 40 nm average diameter by DLS, “Assemblies-60 nm” corresponds to assemblies of 60 nm average diameter by DLS and “Assemblies-200 nm” corresponds to assemblies of 200 nm average diameter by DLS. (d) Analysis by cryo-TEM of the different populations of assemblies compared to initial AgNPs, for which a proper dispersion on the grid is obtained. Assemblies composed of a larger number of particles with a larger diameter of the assemblies were observed on the grids. Clusters of AgNPs considered as an assembly are encircled to help the understanding of our statistical analysis (Fig. S4b, ESI†). The scale bar corresponds to 200 nm. “Iodo” stands for iodoacetamide. |
In order to prepare assemblies of different sizes, L3S and AgNPs were incubated for 1 hour before addition of iodoacetamide. Thiol-blocked AgNP assemblies were then fractionated using discontinuous sucrose gradient centrifugation into assemblies of different average hydrodynamic diameters (Fig. 2c). We obtained populations of assemblies of 40, 60 and 200 nm based on DLS measurement with different SPR spectra and colors (Fig. S3, ESI†) and zeta potentials of −28.3, −21.0 and −24.8 mV for the assemblies of 40, 60 and 200 nm, respectively. The DLS diameter distributions showed a clear shift towards larger diameter for the main peak but a second low intensity peak was observed at smaller values for both 60 and 200 nm assemblies (Fig. 2c). Therefore, the diameters determined by DLS are not accurate and the values 40, 60 and 200 nm are used as labels of the different populations of assemblies in the following. The morphology of the assemblies and the number of particles per assembly were analyzed by electron microscopy: scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and cryo-transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM) (Fig. S4, ESI,† and Fig. 2d). Despite the different preparation protocols, both techniques clearly showed clusters of AgNPs comprising a number of NPs that increased with the expected size of the assemblies. Statistical analysis (Fig. S4b, ESI†) showed that 40 nm assemblies are mainly formed by 1 to 4 NPs, 60 nm assemblies contained between 5 and 40 NPs with most assemblies containing 15 NPs and 200 nm assemblies are made of 16 to 60 NPs with most assemblies containing 40. Indeed, the larger the hydrodynamic diameter of an assembly the more diverse the possibilities to make it. Cryo-TEM also showed very short distances between AgNPs within an assembly, which is consistent with the small size of L3S with maximum distances between two sulfur atoms in the nanometer range (Fig. 2d and Fig. S4c, ESI†). Thiols are at the core of the assembly mechanism, therefore we probed sulfur bonds with synchrotron radiation induced X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (SR-XPS) on assemblies of small (40 nm diameter) and medium (80 nm diameter) sizes (Fig. 3). Between 56 and 64% of the sulfur atoms were found to be bound to Ag atoms at the NP surface, with two distinct geometries in similar proportions. S 2p3/2 components at binding energies (BE) of about 161 eV and 162 eV are attributed to sulfur atoms covalently bonded to metals in a monolayer or sub-monolayer regime, with the S atom in two different hybridizations, sp (161.3 eV) and sp3 (162.1 eV),16,17 coherently with what has already been observed for organic thiols chemisorbed onto gold surfaces.18 The low BE signal is reported as occurring characteristically in self-assembling monolayers of low degree of coverage.19 Indeed, a change in hybridization is likely to cause a peak shift,20 with a BE of 162.1 eV for an sp3 S atom, and a BE of about 161.3 eV (nearly 1 eV lower) would be expected for an sp-hybridized S atom.20 This proves the direct binding of the thiolate functions of L3S to the AgNP with two different geometries, linear and angular, corresponding to sp and sp3 hybridization, respectively (Scheme S1, ESI†).20,21 Due to the iodoacetamide reaction, 25 to 29% of the sulfur atoms were involved in bonds with carbon (thioethers), while the remaining 10 to 15% formed disulfide bridges. This minor fraction of S species might belong to L3S molecules grafted onto the NP surface with two thiolate groups, whereas the third thiolate forms an S–S bond with another partially grafted L3S molecule. Besides, the absence of a signal component below 161 eV suggests that the assemblies do not contain silver sulfide.25,27 XPS Ag 3d spectra showed that the fraction of Ag(I) remained constant around 6.6–6.8% of total Ag in the assemblies (Fig. S5, ESI†), which is close to the expected proportion of surface Ag for a 20 nm diameter NP (5.8%) confirming the limited dissolution of AgNPs. Therefore, AgNP assemblies are thiol-mediated and their structure is stabilized by Ag–S bonds involving L3S that has the capability to bridge AgNPs thanks to its three thiol functions in a tripodal architecture. Besides, ToF-SIMS positive mode analysis enabled the detection of significant amounts of Ag atoms (both isotopes 107 and 109, Fig. S6, ESI†) for citrate-coated AgNPs but not for AgNP assemblies of 40 or 200 nm. Since ToF-SIMS information depth is limited to the first monolayers at the surface of the sample, these results showed that L3S forms a layer that completely covers AgNPs in the assemblies.
Fig. 3 Characterization of AgNP–L3S interaction. SR-XPS S 2p core-level spectra collected on 40 nm AgNP assemblies (a) and 80 nm AgNP assemblies (b). For each signal, two spin–orbit components are reported: S 2p3/2 (thick curve) and S 2p1/2 (thin curve), with a fixed intensity ratio S 2p3/2/S 2p1/2 = 2/1 and doublet separation 1.2 eV. (c) Spectral assignment based on BE values of S 2p3/2 components and semiquantitative analysis resulting in the estimation of the relative amount of the identified S species. * the statistical error in semiquantitative XPS analysis is of about 5% of the estimated value,22 ** as reported in ref. 16, 19, 20, 23–26. |
The biological activity of assemblies of different diameters was then compared with citrated-coated AgNPs in order to gain insights into their potential as biocides and their toxicity for humans. All assemblies possess antibacterial activity against Escherichia coli (Gram-negative), with minimal inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of 5.2, 5.9 and 12.7 μM Ag for 40, 60 and 200 nm assemblies, respectively. These values are higher than those measured for citrate-coated 20 to 60 nm AgNPs (MIC between 0.7 and 2.9 μM) (Fig. 4a), but still much lower than the values reported in the literature for GSH-capped AgNPs (139 μM).28 The biocidal activity was also tested against a Gram-positive bacterium, Bacillus subtilis, known to be difficult to kill by AgNPs notably because of its ability to modify the AgNP surface.6,29 As expected, the Ag concentration required to observe a growth delay was much higher than that for E. coli: 113, 138 and 33 μM for assemblies of 40, 60 and 200 nm, respectively. Very interestingly, these concentrations are lower than the values determined for citrate-coated AgNPs (260 μM) (Fig. 4a). Therefore, the thick and tight coating afforded by the tri-thiol molecule L3S may protect assemblies against AgNP surface modifications that could prevent biocidal activity, rendering our assemblies more robust. Besides, toxicity was assessed in the human hepatocarcinoma cell line HepG2 since AgNPs accumulate in the liver.30 We were not able to reach a significantly toxic concentration (200 μM Ag higher concentration tested) for any of the assemblies, while the lethal dose for 50% of the cells is about 75 μM for citrate-coated AgNPs (Fig. 4b and Fig. S7, ESI†). Therefore, AgNP assemblies possess a biocidal activity against diverse strains but their cytotoxicity for eukaryote cells is drastically decreased.
The current work therefore describes the proof of concept for the development of novel biocidal AgNP assemblies. An original nanomaterial with promising properties has been developed thanks to a tripodal tri-thiol molecule, whose thiolate functions interact with surface Ag(I) ions, thereby bridging the NPs. Finally, further development of the organic molecule will enable the covalent grafting of the assemblies onto objects that require efficient and long-lasting biocides such as medical devices.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: See DOI: 10.1039/c9nh00286c |
‡ Present address: Department F.-A. Forel for Environmental and Aquatic Sciences, University of Geneva, 66 Boulevard Carl Vogt CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland. |
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