Publication | Closed Access
Particle-based photodynamic therapy based on indocyanine green modified plasmonic nanostructures for inactivation of a Crohn's disease-associated Escherichia coli strain
21
Citations
32
References
2016
Year
Particle-based photodynamic therapy (PPDT) holds great promise in theranostic applications. Herein, we demonstrate that PPDT based on gold nanorods coated with an indocyanine green (ICG)-loaded silica shell allows for the inactivation of the Crohn's disease-associated adherent-invasive Escherichia coli strain LF82 (E. coli LF82) under pulsed laser light irradiation at 810 nm. Fine-tuning of the plasmonic structures together with maximizing the photosensitizer loading onto the nanostructures allowed optimizing the singlet oxygen generation capability and the PPDT efficiency. Using a nanoparticle concentration low enough to suppress photothermal heating effects, 6 log<sub>10</sub> reduction in E. coli LF82 viability could be achieved using gold nanostructures displaying a plasmonic band at 900 nm. An additional modality of nanoparticle-based photoinactivation of E. coli is partly observed, with 3 log<sub>10</sub> reduction of bacterial viability using Au NRs@SiO<sub>2</sub> without ICG, due to the two-photon induced formation of reactive oxygen species. Interaction of the particles with the bacterial surface, responsible for the disruption of the bacterial integrity, together with the generation of moderate quantities of singlet oxygen could account for this behavior.
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