A material able to simultaneously sense a bacterial presence and to on-demand release antimicrobial peptides (AMP) in a tunable amount was developed. Simultaneous sensing and release were achieved by the combination of a bacteria-sensing hydrogel with antimicrobial peptide-carrying mesoporous silica particles or coatings. The mesoporous silica with a mesopore diameter of 22 nm was functionalized with a covalently grafted green light-sensitive linker to which antimicrobial peptides were covalently attached. The gelatin-based hydrogel, which contains C14R functionalized mesoporous silica particles, is designed to respond to bacteria presence as it may occur e.g. in a wound's microbiological environment.
In the presence of bacteria and 0.1 % trypsin, a protease enzyme simulating bacterial presence, the hydrogel, deposited in a donut shape, undergoes a shape loss as the bacteria cleave cross-linking bonds within the hydrogel. When observing hydrogel shape loss after 2 hours as a readout of a bacterial infection subsequent irradiation triggers the release of antimicrobial peptides on demand with adjustable concentration-time profiles. The sensing and on-demand release are integrated into commercially available wound dressing fabrics demonstrating an application proof-of-concept. Characterization using ATR-IR spectroscopy, TGA, and BCA validate the successful fabrication and release. The H1.6P composite released antimicrobial agents, reaching concentrations of up to 298 μg/mL at pH 7.4 from a 300 μL sample. The efficacy of the released C14R against E. coli BL21(DE3) is illustrated. Overall, the multifunctionality of this approach presents a promising step towards on-demand wound care and thus for reducing side effects and antibiotic resistance
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