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Antibacterial Mechanisms of Reduced Iron-Containing Smectite–Illite Clay Minerals
53
Citations
65
References
2021
Year
Reduced nontronite has been demonstrated to be antibacterial through the production of hydroxyl radical (<sup>•</sup>OH) from the oxidation of structural Fe(II). Herein, we investigated the antibacterial activity of more common smectite-illite (S-I) clays toward <i>Escherichia coli</i> cells, including montmorillonite SWy-3, illite IMt-2, 50-50 S-I rectorite RAr-1, 30-70 S-I ISCz-1, and nontronite NAu-2. Under an oxic condition, reduced clays (with a prefix r before mineral names) produced reactive oxygen species (ROS), and the antibacterial activity followed the order of rRAr-1 > rSWy-3 ≥ rNAu-2 ≫ rIMt-2 ≥ rISCz-1. The strongest antibacterial activity of rRAr-1 was contributed by a combination of <sup>•</sup>OH and Fe(IV) generated from structural Fe(II)/adsorbed Fe<sup>2+</sup> and soluble Fe<sup>2+</sup>, respectively. Higher levels of lipid and protein oxidation, intracellular ROS accumulation, and membrane disruption were consistent with this antibacterial mechanism of rRAr-1. The antibacterial activity of other S-I clays depended on layer expandability, which determined the reactivity of structural Fe(II) and the production of <sup>•</sup>OH, with the expandable smectite being the most antibacterial and nonexpandable illite the least. Our results provide new insights into the antibacterial mechanisms of clay minerals.
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