Virginia Vadillo-Rodríguez, Patricia Pedraz, Cristina Flors
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The interaction between bacteria and nanomaterials, particularly from a physical or mechanical perspective, has emerged as a topic of significant interest in both science and medicine. Mechanobactericidal nanomaterials, which exert antimicrobial effects through purely physical mechanisms, hold promise as alternative strategies to combat bacterial resistance to traditional antibiotics. High-aspect-ratio nanoparticles and surface topographies are being engineered to enhance their mechanobactericidal properties. However, progress in this field is hindered by an incomplete understanding of how these materials induce mechanical cell death in bacteria. This review examines the role of atomic force microscopy (AFM) nanoindentation in quantifying forces required to rupture the bacterial cell wall. The reported values range from nN to a few tens of nN, depending on the type of bacterium and the experimental conditions used. The potential effect of AFM tip properties, loading speed, bacterial immobilization strategy, or environmental conditions on the measured rupture values are discussed. This perspective also highlights the complexities of modeling bacterial cell rupture and the importance of pressure as a parameter for standardizing results across experiments. Furthermore, the implications of these quantitative insights to understand the mechanisms of action of mechanobactericidal nanomaterials are discussed.
细菌与纳米材料之间的相互作用,尤其是从物理或机械的角度来看,已成为科学和医学领域备受关注的话题。通过纯物理机制产生抗菌效果的机械杀菌纳米材料有望成为对抗细菌对传统抗生素耐药性的替代策略。目前正在设计高宽比纳米粒子和表面拓扑结构,以增强其机械杀菌特性。然而,由于对这些材料如何诱导细菌机械性细胞死亡的理解不全面,这一领域的进展受到了阻碍。本综述探讨了原子力显微镜(AFM)纳米压痕法在量化细菌细胞壁破裂所需力方面的作用。报告的数值从 nN 到几十 nN 不等,取决于细菌的类型和使用的实验条件。本文讨论了原子力显微镜针尖特性、加载速度、细菌固定策略或环境条件对所测破裂值的潜在影响。这一视角还凸显了细菌细胞破裂建模的复杂性,以及压力作为一个参数对不同实验结果标准化的重要性。此外,还讨论了这些定量见解对理解机械杀菌纳米材料作用机制的影响。
期刊介绍:
Small serves as an exceptional platform for both experimental and theoretical studies in fundamental and applied interdisciplinary research at the nano- and microscale. The journal offers a compelling mix of peer-reviewed Research Articles, Reviews, Perspectives, and Comments.
With a remarkable 2022 Journal Impact Factor of 13.3 (Journal Citation Reports from Clarivate Analytics, 2023), Small remains among the top multidisciplinary journals, covering a wide range of topics at the interface of materials science, chemistry, physics, engineering, medicine, and biology.
Small's readership includes biochemists, biologists, biomedical scientists, chemists, engineers, information technologists, materials scientists, physicists, and theoreticians alike.