Coordination-Precipitation Synthesis of Metal Sulfide with Phase Transformation Enhanced Reactivity against Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria, Adv Funct Mater, 2 Feb 2023
Advanced Functional Materials, 2 February, 2023, DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202212655
Coordination-Precipitation Synthesis of Metal Sulfide with Phase Transformation Enhanced Reactivity against Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria
Yuan Liu, Xiaonan Wang, Xiaowan Fan, Mengyue Ge, Ling Fang, Ye Yuan, Lei Chen, Jing Jiang, Anmin Cao, Lizeng Gao
Abstract
Given the challenge of bacterial resistance to antibiotics, there is an urgent need to develop alternative antibacterial agents. While some metal sulfides are promising candidates against bacterial resistance, their fundamental mechanism of action (MoA) remains unclear. Herein, a “coordination-precipitation” method is developed for the synthesis of a metal sulfide library and the evaluation of antibacterial consistency. Employing ethylenediamine as a coordination agent and thioglycolic acid as a precipitation agent, 12 different metal sulfide nanocrystals following the same procedure are synthesized. Antibacterial assessment reveals that six metal sulfides with bactericidal potency perform a common feature of phase transformation. In particular, in the process of manganese sulfide (MnS) transformation to Mn3O4, a highly reactive complex of high-valance manganese (Mn3+) and polysulfide (S32-) accompanied by superoxide is sustainably generated, which synergistically induces bacterial death with a hallmark of lipid peroxidation (named liperoptosis) specifically toward Gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus). In addition, this MoA confers MnS with therapeutic effects superior to vancomycin in a methicillin-resistant S. aureus-infected skin wound model. This study reveals the correlation between phase transformation and the antibacterial MoA of metal sulfides and provides a general fundamental to design a non-antibiotic antibacterial candidate against bacterial resistance.
Article link:https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/adfm.202212655