Bacterial biofilm formation is a huge problem in industry and medicine. Therefore, the discovery of anti-biofilm agents may hold great promise. Biofilm formation is usually a consequence of bacterial cell-cell communication, a process called quorum sensing (QS). CeO nanocrystals (NCs) have been established as haloperoxidase (HPO) mimics and ecologically beneficial biofilm inhibitors. They were suggested to interfere with QS, a mechanism termed quorum quenching (QQ), but their molecular mechanism remained elusive. We show that CeO NCs are effective QQ agents, inactivating QS signals by bromination. Catalytic bromination of 3-oxo-C-AHL a QS signaling compound used by , was detected in the presence of CeO NCs, bromide ions, and hydrogen peroxide. Brominated acyl-homoserine lactones (AHLs) no longer act as QS signals but were not detected in the bacterial cultures. Externally added brominated AHLs also disappeared in cultures within minutes of their addition, indicating that they are rapidly degraded by the bacteria. Moreover, we detected the catalytic bromination of 2-heptyl-1-hydroxyquinolin-4(1)-one (HQNO), a multifunctional non-AHL QS signal from with antibacterial and algicidal properties controlling the expression of many virulence genes. Brominated HQNO was not degraded by the bacteria The repression of the quinolone signal (PQS) production and biofilm formation in through the catalytic formation of Br-HQNO on surfaces with coatings containing CeO enzyme mimics validates the non-toxic strategy for the development of anti-infectives.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.2c04377 | DOI Listing |
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