Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology (Aug 2023)

Eco-friendly synthesized nanoparticles as antimicrobial agents: an updated review

  • Shilpa Borehalli Mayegowda,
  • Arpita Roy,
  • Manjula N. G.,
  • Soumya Pandit,
  • Soumya Pandit,
  • Saad Alghamdi,
  • Mazen Almehmadi,
  • Mamdouh Allahyani,
  • Nasser S. Awwad,
  • Rohit Sharma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2023.1224778
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

Read online

Green synthesis of NPs has gained extensive acceptance as they are reliable, eco-friendly, sustainable, and stable. Chemically synthesized NPs cause lung inflammation, heart problems, liver dysfunction, immune suppression, organ accumulation, and altered metabolism, leading to organ-specific toxicity. NPs synthesized from plants and microbes are biologically safe and cost-effective. These microbes and plant sources can consume and accumulate inorganic metal ions from their adjacent niches, thus synthesizing extracellular and intracellular NPs. These inherent characteristics of biological cells to process and modify inorganic metal ions into NPs have helped explore an area of biochemical analysis. Biological entities or their extracts used in NPs include algae, bacteria, fungi, actinomycetes, viruses, yeasts, and plants, with varying capabilities through the bioreduction of metallic NPs. These biosynthesized NPs have a wide range of pharmaceutical applications, such as tissue engineering, detection of pathogens or proteins, antimicrobial agents, anticancer mediators, vehicles for drug delivery, formulations for functional foods, and identification of pathogens, which can contribute to translational research in medical applications. NPs have various applications in the food and drug packaging industry, agriculture, and environmental remediation.

Keywords