The rising incidence
of antibiotic-resistant infections from contaminated surfaces in hospitals
or implanted medical devices has led to increasing interest in new
antibacterial surfaces. Photoactivatable surfaces that can generate
cytotoxic reactive oxygen species under exposure to ambient light
is a promising approach to inactivation of surface-borne microorganisms.
There is growing interest in the use of quantum dots (QDs) as light-harvesting
agents for photobactericidal applications, but the cadmium in commonly
used QDs will restrict clinical application. Herein, the photobactericidal
activity of novel polyurethane substrates containing cadmium-free
QDs was tested against clinical multidrug-resistant Gram-positive
and Gram-negative bacterial strains: methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and a carbapenemase-producing
strain of Escherichia coli (E. coli). To enhance the capacity for reactive oxygen
species generation, QDs were incorporated into the polymer with a
photosensitizing dye, crystal violet. Close proximity between the
QD and dye enables electron and energy transfer processes leading
to generation of cytotoxic singlet oxygen and superoxide radicals.
A QD solution in cyclohexane was premixed with a solution of CV in
the more polar solvent, dichloromethane, to promote the formation
of QD–CV nanocomposite complexes via CV adsorption. This solution
was then used to embed the QDs and crystal violet into medical grade
polyurethane via swell–encapsulation. The combination of QD
and CV elicited significant synergistic antibacterial activity under
visible light against MRSA within 1 h (99.98% reduction) and E. coli within 4 h (99.96% reduction). Photoluminescence
lifetime and singlet oxygen phosphorescence measurements demonstrated
that interaction between the QDs and the crystal violet occurs within
the polymer and leads to enhanced generation of reactive oxygen species.
Strong inhibition of kill was observed using the superoxide scavenger,
superoxide dismutase. The efficacy of these QD–CV polymer substrates,
that can harvest light across the visible spectrum, against multidrug-resistant
bacteria demonstrates the feasibility of this approach.
Polyurethane incorporated with cadmium-free quantum dots and crystal violet dye kill >99.9% of multi-drug resistant and intrinsically resistant clinical strains of bacteria under ambient light irradiation.
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