Membrane interactions and antimicrobial effects of layered double hydroxide nanoparticles.
Malekkhaiat Häffner. S S; Nyström. L L; Nordström. R R; Xu. Z P ZP; Davoudi. M M; Schmidtchen. A A; Malmsten. M M
Key Findings
- Smaller LDH nanoparticles (â42âŻnm) bind more strongly to anionic, bacteriaâmimicking membranes than larger ones.
- The combination of small LDH particles and LLâ37 shows sizeâdependent synergistic membrane destabilization.
- LDH particles cause charge reversal and flocculation of both liposomes and bacteria, potentially confining microbes rather than directly killing them.
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests that pairing LLâ37 with very small LDH nanoparticles could boost its antimicrobial action, but the approach is still experimental and not ready for DIY or consumer use. For now, it mainly adds to the scientific understanding of how nanoparticle size influences peptide synergy.
Summary
Scientists found that tiny layered doubleâhydroxide (LDH) particles stick to bacterialâlike membranes better when theyâre smaller, and this makes the natural antimicrobial peptide LLâ37 work harder at breaking those membranes. The particles also flip the charge on bacteria and tiny fat bubbles, causing them to clump together, which could help trap or clear microbes. However, the particles alone donât directly kill the bacteria, and the whole system is still a labâstage concept.
Abstract
Membrane interactions are critical for the successful use of inorganic nanoparticles as antimicrobial agents and as carriers of, or co-actives with, antimicrobial peptides (AMPs). In order to contribute to an increased understanding of these, we here investigate effects of particle size (42-208 nm) on layered double hydroxide (LDH) interactions with both bacteria-mimicking and mammalian-mimicking lipid membranes. LDH binding to bacteria-mimicking membranes, extraction of anionic lipids, as well as resulting membrane destabilization, was found to increase with decreasing particle size, also translating into size-dependent synergistic effects with the antimicrobial peptide LL-37. Due to strong interactions with anionic lipopolysaccharide and peptidoglycan layers, direct membrane disruption of both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria is suppressed. However, LDH nanoparticles cause size-dependent charge reversal and resulting flocculation of both liposomes and bacteria, which may provide a mechanism for bacterial confinement or clearance. Taken together, these findings demonstrate a set of previously unknown behaviors, including synergistic membrane destabilization and dual confinement/killing of bacteria through combined LDH/AMP exposure, of potential therapeutic interest.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-09-13T00:00:00.000Z
10.1039/c7cp02701j
28
63