Hydrophobic pinning with copper nanowhiskers leads to bactericidal properties.

The considerable morbidity associated with hospitalized patients and clinics in developed countries due to biofilm formation on biomedical implants and surgical instruments is a heavy economic burden. An alternative to chemically treated surfaces for bactericidal activity started emerging from micro...

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Main Authors: Ajay Vikram Singh, Semanur Baylan, Byung-Wook Park, Gunther Richter, Metin Sitti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5388474?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-7785e0bf6e414013a5367f64b21b22a52020-11-24T20:50:02ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01124e017542810.1371/journal.pone.0175428Hydrophobic pinning with copper nanowhiskers leads to bactericidal properties.Ajay Vikram SinghSemanur BaylanByung-Wook ParkGunther RichterMetin SittiThe considerable morbidity associated with hospitalized patients and clinics in developed countries due to biofilm formation on biomedical implants and surgical instruments is a heavy economic burden. An alternative to chemically treated surfaces for bactericidal activity started emerging from micro/nanoscale topographical cues in the last decade. Here, we demonstrate a putative antibacterial surface using copper nanowhiskers deposited by molecular beam epitaxy. Furthermore, the control of biological response is based on hydrophobic pinning of water droplets in the Wenzel regime, causing mechanical injury and cell death. Scanning electron microscopy images revealed the details of the surface morphology and non-contact mode laser scanning of the surface revealed the microtopography-associated quantitative parameters. Introducing the bacterial culture over nanowhiskers produces mechanical injury to cells, leading to a reduction in cell density over time due to local pinning of culture medium to whisker surfaces. Extended culture to 72 hours to observe biofilm formation revealed biofilm inhibition with scattered microcolonies and significantly reduced biovolume on nanowhiskers. Therefore, surfaces patterned with copper nanowhiskers can serve as potential antibiofilm surfaces. The topography-based antibacterial surfaces introduce a novel prospect in developing mechanoresponsive nanobiomaterials to reduce the risk of medical device biofilm-associated infections, contrary to chemical leaching of copper as a traditional bactericidal agent.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5388474?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ajay Vikram Singh
Semanur Baylan
Byung-Wook Park
Gunther Richter
Metin Sitti
spellingShingle Ajay Vikram Singh
Semanur Baylan
Byung-Wook Park
Gunther Richter
Metin Sitti
Hydrophobic pinning with copper nanowhiskers leads to bactericidal properties.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Ajay Vikram Singh
Semanur Baylan
Byung-Wook Park
Gunther Richter
Metin Sitti
author_sort Ajay Vikram Singh
title Hydrophobic pinning with copper nanowhiskers leads to bactericidal properties.
title_short Hydrophobic pinning with copper nanowhiskers leads to bactericidal properties.
title_full Hydrophobic pinning with copper nanowhiskers leads to bactericidal properties.
title_fullStr Hydrophobic pinning with copper nanowhiskers leads to bactericidal properties.
title_full_unstemmed Hydrophobic pinning with copper nanowhiskers leads to bactericidal properties.
title_sort hydrophobic pinning with copper nanowhiskers leads to bactericidal properties.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The considerable morbidity associated with hospitalized patients and clinics in developed countries due to biofilm formation on biomedical implants and surgical instruments is a heavy economic burden. An alternative to chemically treated surfaces for bactericidal activity started emerging from micro/nanoscale topographical cues in the last decade. Here, we demonstrate a putative antibacterial surface using copper nanowhiskers deposited by molecular beam epitaxy. Furthermore, the control of biological response is based on hydrophobic pinning of water droplets in the Wenzel regime, causing mechanical injury and cell death. Scanning electron microscopy images revealed the details of the surface morphology and non-contact mode laser scanning of the surface revealed the microtopography-associated quantitative parameters. Introducing the bacterial culture over nanowhiskers produces mechanical injury to cells, leading to a reduction in cell density over time due to local pinning of culture medium to whisker surfaces. Extended culture to 72 hours to observe biofilm formation revealed biofilm inhibition with scattered microcolonies and significantly reduced biovolume on nanowhiskers. Therefore, surfaces patterned with copper nanowhiskers can serve as potential antibiofilm surfaces. The topography-based antibacterial surfaces introduce a novel prospect in developing mechanoresponsive nanobiomaterials to reduce the risk of medical device biofilm-associated infections, contrary to chemical leaching of copper as a traditional bactericidal agent.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5388474?pdf=render
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AT byungwookpark hydrophobicpinningwithcoppernanowhiskersleadstobactericidalproperties
AT guntherrichter hydrophobicpinningwithcoppernanowhiskersleadstobactericidalproperties
AT metinsitti hydrophobicpinningwithcoppernanowhiskersleadstobactericidalproperties
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