TitleBroad-Spectrum Antimicrobial Effects of Photocatalysis Using Titanium Dioxide Nanoparticles Are Strongly Potentiated by Addition of Potassium Iodide
AuthorsHuang, Ying-Ying
Choi, Hwanjun
Kushida, Yu
Bhayana, Brijesh
Wang, Yuguang
Hamblin, Michael R.
AffiliationMassachusetts Gen Hosp, Wellman Ctr Photomed, Boston, MA 02114 USA.
Harvard Med Sch, Dept Dermatol, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
Korea Adv Inst Sci & Technol, Seoul, South Korea.
Univ Tokyo, Grad Sch Pharmaceut Sci, Tokyo, Japan.
Peking Univ, Ctr Digital Dent, Sch & Hosp Stomatol, Beijing, Peoples R China.
Harvard MIT Div Hlth Sci & Technol, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Wellman Ctr Photomed, Boston, MA 02114 USA.
Hamblin, MR (reprint author), Harvard Med Sch, Dept Dermatol, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
Hamblin, MR (reprint author), Harvard MIT Div Hlth Sci & Technol, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
KeywordsPHOTODYNAMIC INACTIVATION
IN-VITRO
SINGLET OXYGEN
BACTERIA
THERAPY
TIO2
MYELOPEROXIDASE
DISINFECTION
IRRADIATION
IODINATION
Issue Date2016
PublisherANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY
CitationANTIMICROBIAL AGENTS AND CHEMOTHERAPY.2016,60(9),5445-5453.
AbstractPhotocatalysis describes the excitation of titanium dioxide nanoparticles (a wide-band gap semiconductor) by UVA light to produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) that can destroy many organic molecules. This photocatalysis process is used for environmental remediation, while antimicrobial photocatalysis can kill many classes of microorganisms and can be used to sterilize water and surfaces and possibly to treat infections. Here we show that addition of the nontoxic inorganic salt potassium iodide to TiO2 (P25) excited by UVA potentiated the killing of Gram-positive bacteria, Gram-negative bacteria, and fungi by up to 6 logs. The microbial killing depended on the concentration of TiO2, the fluence of UVA light, and the concentration of KI (the best effect was at 100 mM). There was formation of long-lived antimicrobial species (probably hypoiodite and iodine) in the reaction mixture (detected by adding bacteria after light), but short-lived antibacterial reactive species (bacteria present during light) produced more killing. Fluorescent probes for ROS (hydroxyl radical and singlet oxygen) were quenched by iodide. Tri-iodide (which has a peak at 350 nm and a blue product with starch) was produced by TiO2-UVA-KI but was much reduced when methicillin- resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) cells were also present. The model tyrosine substrate N-acetyl tyrosine ethyl ester was iodinated in a light dose-dependent manner. We conclude that UVA-excited TiO2 in the presence of iodide produces reactive iodine intermediates during illumination that kill microbial cells and long-lived oxidized iodine products that kill after light has ended.
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/493541
ISSN0066-4804
DOI10.1128/AAC.00980-16
IndexedSCI(E)
PubMed
Appears in Collections:口腔医院

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