Concentration Ranges of Antibacterial Cations for Showing the Highest Antibacterial Efficacy but the Least Cytotoxicity against Mammalian Cells: Implications for a New Antibacterial Mechanism

Chengyun Ning(South China University of Technology), Xiaolan Wang(South China University of Technology), Lihua Li(General Hospital of Guangzhou Military Command), Ye Zhu(University of Oklahoma), Mei Li(General Hospital of Guangzhou Military Command), Peng Yu(South China University of Technology), Lei Zhou(South China University of Technology), Zhengnan Zhou(South China University of Technology), Junqi Chen(South China University of Technology), Guoxin Tan(Guangdong University of Technology), Yu Zhang(General Hospital of Guangzhou Military Command), Yingjun Wang(South China University of Technology), Chuanbin Mao(University of Oklahoma)
Chemical Research in Toxicology
August 10, 2015
Cited by 334

Abstract

Antibacterial metal ions, such as Ag(+), Zn(2+) and Cu(2+), have been extensively used in medical implants and devices due to their strong broad spectrum of antibacterial activity. However, it is still a controversial issue as to whether they can show the desired antibacterial activity while being toxic to mammalian cells. It is very important to balance their antibacterial effectiveness with minimal damage to mammalian cells. Toward this end, this study is to identify the suitable concentrations of these three ions at which they can effectively kill two types of clinically relevant bacteria (Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) and Escherichia coli (E. coli)) but show no obvious cytotoxicity on fibroblasts. Such concentration ranges are found to be 2.5 × 10(-7) M-10(-6) M, 10(-5) M-10(-4) M, and 10(-5) M-10(-4) M for Ag(+), Zn(2+), and Cu(2+), respectively. Investigation of their antibacterial mechanism shows that these three metal ions all show antibacterial property through a mechanism of damaging bacterial cell membranes by the generation of reactive oxygen species but surprisingly preserving the integrity of bacterial genomic DNA. The encouraging results indicate that antibacterial metal ions with controlled concentrations can bring considerable benefits to biomedical applications.


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