In this project, we propose a highly effective photosensitizer that breaks through drug-resistant bacterial infections with zinc-doped carbon dots. By passing through the membrane of drug-resistant bacteria, the photosensitizers produce ROS in bacteria under the action of blue light to directly kill bacteria, so as to realize the antibacterial local treatment of drug-resistant bacteria. The experiment firstly uses an efficient one-step hydrothermal method to prepare zinc-doped red-light CDs as photosensitizers, in which zinc metal was doped to improve the optical properties of the CDs. Then we try first to use EDTA as a second-step attenuator for preparing CDs to obtain photosensitizers with high-efficiency and low toxicity. cytotoxicity tests, bacterial effect tests, and animal experiments have also demonstrated that this antibacterial method has great potential for clinical translation, with a bactericidal efficiency of up to 90%. More notably, we used this antibacterial regimen seven times repeatedly to simulate the bacterial resistance process, with a bactericidal efficiency of up to 90% every time. The result indicated that did not develop resistance to our method, showing that our method has the potential to break through drug-resistant bacterial infections as an alternative to antibiotic candidates.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9724749PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2na00375aDOI Listing

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