PCL/Gelatin/Graphene Oxide Electrospun Nanofibers: Effect of Surface Functionalization on In Vitro and Antibacterial Response

The emergence of resistance to pathogenic bacteria has resulted from the misuse of antibiotics used in wound treatment. Therefore, nanomaterial-based agents can be used to overcome these limitations. In this study, polycaprolactone (PCL)/gelatin/graphene oxide electrospun nanofibers (PGO) are functi...

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Published in:Nanomaterials
Main Author: Hamdan N.; Khodir W.K.W.A.; Hamid S.A.; Nasir M.H.M.; Hamzah A.S.; Cruz-Maya I.; Guarino V.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85147827313&doi=10.3390%2fnano13030488&partnerID=40&md5=27cccbee2257ae95f7f85301a8937492
id 2-s2.0-85147827313
spelling 2-s2.0-85147827313
Hamdan N.; Khodir W.K.W.A.; Hamid S.A.; Nasir M.H.M.; Hamzah A.S.; Cruz-Maya I.; Guarino V.
PCL/Gelatin/Graphene Oxide Electrospun Nanofibers: Effect of Surface Functionalization on In Vitro and Antibacterial Response
2023
Nanomaterials
13
3
10.3390/nano13030488
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85147827313&doi=10.3390%2fnano13030488&partnerID=40&md5=27cccbee2257ae95f7f85301a8937492
The emergence of resistance to pathogenic bacteria has resulted from the misuse of antibiotics used in wound treatment. Therefore, nanomaterial-based agents can be used to overcome these limitations. In this study, polycaprolactone (PCL)/gelatin/graphene oxide electrospun nanofibers (PGO) are functionalized via plasma treatment with the monomeric groups diallylamine (PGO-M1), acrylic acid (PGO-M2), and tert-butyl acrylate (PGO-M3) to enhance the action against bacteria cells. The surface functionalization influences the morphology, surface wettability, mechanical properties, and thermal stability of PGO nanofibers. PGO-M1 and PGO-M2 exhibit good antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli, whereas PGO-M3 tends to reduce their antibacterial properties compared to PGO nanofibers. The highest proportion of dead bacteria cells is found on the surface of hydrophilic PGO-M1, whereas live cells are colonized on the surface of hydrophobic PGO-M3. Likewise, PGO-M1 shows a good interaction with L929, which is confirmed by the high levels of adhesion and proliferation with respect to the control. All the results confirm that surface functionalization can be strategically used as a tool to engineer PGO nanofibers with controlled antibacterial properties for the fabrication of highly versatile devices suitable for different applications (e.g., health, environmental pollution). © 2023 by the authors.
MDPI
20794991
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access; Green Open Access
author Hamdan N.; Khodir W.K.W.A.; Hamid S.A.; Nasir M.H.M.; Hamzah A.S.; Cruz-Maya I.; Guarino V.
spellingShingle Hamdan N.; Khodir W.K.W.A.; Hamid S.A.; Nasir M.H.M.; Hamzah A.S.; Cruz-Maya I.; Guarino V.
PCL/Gelatin/Graphene Oxide Electrospun Nanofibers: Effect of Surface Functionalization on In Vitro and Antibacterial Response
author_facet Hamdan N.; Khodir W.K.W.A.; Hamid S.A.; Nasir M.H.M.; Hamzah A.S.; Cruz-Maya I.; Guarino V.
author_sort Hamdan N.; Khodir W.K.W.A.; Hamid S.A.; Nasir M.H.M.; Hamzah A.S.; Cruz-Maya I.; Guarino V.
title PCL/Gelatin/Graphene Oxide Electrospun Nanofibers: Effect of Surface Functionalization on In Vitro and Antibacterial Response
title_short PCL/Gelatin/Graphene Oxide Electrospun Nanofibers: Effect of Surface Functionalization on In Vitro and Antibacterial Response
title_full PCL/Gelatin/Graphene Oxide Electrospun Nanofibers: Effect of Surface Functionalization on In Vitro and Antibacterial Response
title_fullStr PCL/Gelatin/Graphene Oxide Electrospun Nanofibers: Effect of Surface Functionalization on In Vitro and Antibacterial Response
title_full_unstemmed PCL/Gelatin/Graphene Oxide Electrospun Nanofibers: Effect of Surface Functionalization on In Vitro and Antibacterial Response
title_sort PCL/Gelatin/Graphene Oxide Electrospun Nanofibers: Effect of Surface Functionalization on In Vitro and Antibacterial Response
publishDate 2023
container_title Nanomaterials
container_volume 13
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.3390/nano13030488
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85147827313&doi=10.3390%2fnano13030488&partnerID=40&md5=27cccbee2257ae95f7f85301a8937492
description The emergence of resistance to pathogenic bacteria has resulted from the misuse of antibiotics used in wound treatment. Therefore, nanomaterial-based agents can be used to overcome these limitations. In this study, polycaprolactone (PCL)/gelatin/graphene oxide electrospun nanofibers (PGO) are functionalized via plasma treatment with the monomeric groups diallylamine (PGO-M1), acrylic acid (PGO-M2), and tert-butyl acrylate (PGO-M3) to enhance the action against bacteria cells. The surface functionalization influences the morphology, surface wettability, mechanical properties, and thermal stability of PGO nanofibers. PGO-M1 and PGO-M2 exhibit good antibacterial activity against Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli, whereas PGO-M3 tends to reduce their antibacterial properties compared to PGO nanofibers. The highest proportion of dead bacteria cells is found on the surface of hydrophilic PGO-M1, whereas live cells are colonized on the surface of hydrophobic PGO-M3. Likewise, PGO-M1 shows a good interaction with L929, which is confirmed by the high levels of adhesion and proliferation with respect to the control. All the results confirm that surface functionalization can be strategically used as a tool to engineer PGO nanofibers with controlled antibacterial properties for the fabrication of highly versatile devices suitable for different applications (e.g., health, environmental pollution). © 2023 by the authors.
publisher MDPI
issn 20794991
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access; Green Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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