Glucose-fueled cationic nanomotors for promoting the healing of infected diabetic wounds.

J Colloid Interface Sci

State Key Laboratory of Advanced Technology for Materials Synthesis and Processing, International School of Materials Science and Engineering, Wuhan University of Technology, Wuhan 430070, China; Wuhan Institute of Photochemistry and Technology, 7 North Bingang Road, Wuhan 430083, China. Electronic address:

Published: February 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hyperglycemia can worsen bacterial infections in diabetic wounds, but current treatments struggle with issues like bacterial resistance and blood sugar fluctuations.!* -
  • Researchers developed glucose-powered nanomotors that target high glucose and bacteria areas while lowering glucose levels, enhancing their antibacterial effectiveness.!* -
  • In trials, these nanomotors significantly sped up healing in infected diabetic wounds and showed they were safe for use, offering new hope for treating such infections in clinical settings.!*

Article Abstract

Hyperglycemia-promoted bacterial infection will seriously exacerbate diabetic wounds, and its current clinical treatments are suffering from the adverse effects associated with off-target, bacterial resistance, and glycemic fluctuation. Herein, we present a kind of glucose-fueled cationic nanomotors capable of remarkably enhancing antibacterial efficacy, and thus expediting diabetic wound healing. The nanomotors have positively charged surfaces, and consist of mesoporous bowl-shaped polydopamine nanoparticles grafted with quaternized polymer brushes and coupled with glucose oxidase (GOx) and catalase (CAT). Stemming from the GOx-CAT cascade reaction in diabetic wound microenvironment, they can perform robust chemotactic motion towards both high glucose regions, where bacteria proliferation predominantly occurs, and elevated HO levels, which bacterial metabolism produced. This enables the nanomotors to facilitate targeted migration towards bacteria-rich regions and simultaneous downregulation of glycemic levels, as well as to significantly enhance the electrostatic interaction between antibacterial components and bacteria. Consequently, the nanomotors exhibit amplified contact-killing effects of their attached cationic molecules, leading to an almost 10-fold enhancement in antibacterial efficacy compared to previous counterparts. The in vivo experiments approved that the nanomotors demonstrated the accelerated healing of infected diabetic wounds by S. aureus and biosafety. The results herein provide an insight into the clinical treatment of infected diabetic wounds.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2024.10.011DOI Listing

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