Issue 14, 2022

Molecular mechanisms of the antibacterial activity of polyimide fibers in a skin-wound model with Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial infection in vivo

Abstract

Recently, the need for antibacterial dressings has amplified because of the increase of traumatic injuries. However, there is still a lack of ideal, natural antibacterial dressings that show an efficient antibacterial property with no toxicity. Polyimide (PI) used as an implantable and flexible material has been recently reported as a mixture of particles showing more desirable antibacterial properties. However, we have identified a novel type of natural polyimide (PI) fiber that revealed antibacterial properties by itself for the first time. The PI fiber material is mainly composed of C, N, and O, and contains a small amount of Ca and Cl; the characteristic peaks of polyimide appear at 1774 cm−1, 1713 cm−1, 1370 cm−1, 1087 cm−1, and 722 cm−1. PI fibers displayed significant antibacterial activities against Escherichia coli (as a Gram-negative bacteria model) and methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA, as a Gram-positive bacteria model) according to the time-kill kinetics in vitro, and PI fibers damaged both bacterial cell walls directly. PI fibers efficiently ameliorated a local infection in vivo, inhibited the bacterial burden, decreased infiltrating macrophages, and accelerated wound healing in an E. coli- or MRSA-infected wound model. In conclusion, PI fibers used in the present study may act as potent antibacterial dressings protecting from MRSA or E. coli infections and as promising candidates for antimicrobial materials for trauma and surgical applications.

Graphical abstract: Molecular mechanisms of the antibacterial activity of polyimide fibers in a skin-wound model with Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial infection in vivo

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Apr 2022
Accepted
01 Jun 2022
First published
02 Jun 2022
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Nanoscale Adv., 2022,4, 3043-3053

Molecular mechanisms of the antibacterial activity of polyimide fibers in a skin-wound model with Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial infection in vivo

X. Yang, W. Ma, H. Lin, S. Ao, H. Liu, H. Zhang, W. Tang, H. Xiao, F. Wang, J. Zhu, D. Liu, S. Lin, Y. Zhang, Z. Zhou, C. Chen and H. Liang, Nanoscale Adv., 2022, 4, 3043 DOI: 10.1039/D2NA00221C

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