We describe the design and synthesis of degradable, dual-release, pro-antimicrobial poly(thioether acetal) networks derived from synergistic pairs of aromatic terpene aldehydes. Initially, we identified pairs of aromatic terpene aldehyde derivatives exhibiting a synergistic antimicrobial activity against by determining fractional inhibitory concentrations. Synergistic aldehydes were converted into dialkene acetal monomers and copolymerized at various ratios with a multifunctional thiol via thiol-ene photopolymerization. The step-growth nature of the thiol-ene polymerization ensures every cross-link junction contains a degradable acetal linkage enabling a fully cross-linked polymer network to revert into its small molecule constituents upon hydrolysis, releasing the synergistic aldehydes as active antimicrobial compounds. A three-pronged approach was used to characterize the poly(thioether acetal) materials: (i) determination of the degradation/aldehyde release behavior, (ii) evaluation of the antimicrobial activity, and (iii) identification of the cellular pathways impacted by the aldehydes on a library of mutated bacteria. From this approach, a polymer network derived from a 40:60 -bromobenzaldehyde/-anisaldehyde monomer ratio exhibited potent antimicrobial action against , a common opportunistic human pathogen. From a transposon mutagenesis assay, we showed that these aldehydes target porins and multidrug efflux pumps. The aldehydes released from the poly(thioether acetal) networks exhibited negligible toxicity to mammalian tissue culture cells, supporting the potential development of these materials as dual-release antimicrobial biomaterial platforms.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsabm.8b00500 | DOI Listing |
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