Chemiluminescent carbon nanodots for dynamic and guided antibacteria

Abstract Advanced antibacterial technologies are needed to counter the rapid emergence of drug-resistant bacteria. Image-guided therapy is one of the most promising strategies for efficiently and accurately curing bacterial infections. Herein, a chemiluminescence (CL)-dynamic/guided antibacteria (CD...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jiang-Fan Han, Qing Lou, Zhong-Zheng Ding, Guang-Song Zheng, Qing-Chao Ni, Run-Wei Song, Kai-Kai Liu, Jin-Hao Zang, Lin Dong, Cheng-Long Shen, Chong-Xin Shan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2023-05-01
Series:Light: Science & Applications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41377-023-01149-8
Description
Summary:Abstract Advanced antibacterial technologies are needed to counter the rapid emergence of drug-resistant bacteria. Image-guided therapy is one of the most promising strategies for efficiently and accurately curing bacterial infections. Herein, a chemiluminescence (CL)-dynamic/guided antibacteria (CDGA) with multiple reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation capacity and chemiexcited near-infrared emission has been designed for the precise theranostics of bacterial infection by employing near-infrared emissive carbon nanodots (CDs) and peroxalate as CL fuels. Mechanistically, hydrogen peroxide generated in the bacterial microenvironment can trigger the chemically initiated electron exchange between CDs and energy-riched intermediate originated from the oxidized peroxalate, enabling bacterial induced inflammation imaging. Meanwhile, type I/II photochemical ROS production and type III ultrafast charge transfer from CDs under the self-illumination can inhibit the bacteria proliferation efficiently. The potential clinical utility of CDGA is further demonstrated in bacteria infected mice trauma model. The self-illuminating CDGA exhibits an excellent in vivo imaging quality in early detecting wound infections and internal inflammation caused by bacteria, and further are proven as efficient broad-spectrum antibacterial nanomedicines without drug-resistance, whose sterilizing rate is up to 99.99%.
ISSN:2047-7538