Bioactive Materials (Feb 2025)

Nucleotide coordinated polymers, a ROS-based immunomodulatory antimicrobial, doubly kill Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms of implant infections

  • Jinghuang Chen,
  • Xianqing Tang,
  • Qihan Sun,
  • Xin Ji,
  • Xingbo Wang,
  • Zhendong Liu,
  • Xu Zhang,
  • Haijiao Xu,
  • Fan Yang,
  • Jian Sun,
  • Xiurong Yang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 44
pp. 461 – 473

Abstract

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Pseudomonas aeruginosa causes high morbidity and mortality in nosocomial infections, and newly approved antibiotics have been declining for decades. A green and universal deprotonation-driven strategy is used to screen the guanylic acid-metal ion coordination polymer nanoparticles (GMC), instead of the failure of binding occurs when specific metal ion participation. We find that the precise pH-dependent oxidase-like activity of GMC-2 orchestrates a duple symphony of immune modulation for Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilm infections. Specifically, GMC-2-mediated reactive oxygen species (ROS) regulation triggers mitochondrial dysfunction and releases damage-associated molecular patterns, engaging pattern recognition receptors and resulting in endogenous innate immune activation. Meanwhile, GMC-2-triggered ROS generation in a mildly acidic biofilm environment destroys the biofilm, exposing exogenous pathogen-associated molecular patterns. GMC-2 cannot cause resistance for Pseudomonas aeruginosa compared with conventional antibiotics. In an infected implant mouse model, Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms were effectively eliminated by GMC-2-mediated triggering of innate and adaptive immunity. These findings provide a universal approach for facilitating the binding of biomolecules with metal ions and highlight the precise ROS-regulating platform plays a critical role in initiating endogenous and exogenous immune activation targeted for bacterial biofilm infection.

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