Bioactive glass, laced with metal oxides, kills bacteria
Scientists at Aston University have found a way to significantly increase the antimicrobial properties of a material used in many medical devices and clinical surfaces: glass.
The research team had already developed bacteria-killing bioactive glass laced with a single metal oxide of zinc, cobalt or copper. Their latest work, published in the journal ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering, combined pairs of metal oxides in the material and found that some combinations were more than 100 times better at killing bacteria than using single oxides alone.
Bioactive glass is made from high-purity chemicals designed to induce specific biological activity, but the type currently in clinical use — often as a bone filler — does not contain antimicrobial substances. The Aston University research showed that combinations of metal oxides can improve the antimicrobial properties of bioactive glass and the researchers believe this approach could be applied to other materials for clinical use.
“Antibiotic drugs have been used in combination since the 1950s, as two antimicrobials can broaden the spectrum of coverage by aiming for different bacterial targets at the same time,” noted research leader Professor Richard Martin. “Our research is the first to show that this combination approach can work with materials as well.”
Prof Martin and colleagues Dr Tony Worthington and Dr Farah Raja created bioactive glass laced with small amounts of cobalt, copper or zinc, and combinations of two of the three oxides. They then ground these into a powder which they sterilised, before adding it to colonies of Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus along with the fungus Candida abicans. They compared the effects of the standard glass and glass with either solo metal oxides or the combinations, measuring bacterial and fungal kill rates over 24 hours.
All of the metal oxide-laced glass — both single and combined — performed better than the glass alone. Copper, combined with either cobalt or zinc, had the strongest effect on the bacteria, followed by a combination of cobalt and zinc. Both copper combinations were over 100 times better than single oxides at killing E. coli, while copper and zinc was similarly effective against S. aureus. The cobalt and zinc combination had the strongest effect on the fungus.
“It was exciting to run our experiments and find something that is significantly better at stopping infection in its tracks and could potentially reduce the number of antibiotic treatments that are prescribed,” Prof Martin said. “We believe combining antimicrobial metal oxides has significant potential for numerous applications including implant materials, hospital surfaces and wound healing dressings.”
Dr Worthington added, “We have shown that co-doping surfaces with these combined antimicrobial metals, including copper, zinc and cobalt, could reduce bacterial adhesion and colonisation to surfaces or devices used in clinical practice. The use of antimicrobial metals is potentially the way forward, given discovery of new antibiotics is currently limited. We would urge manufacturers to investigate whether our new approach could be used for their biomedical materials.”
Please follow us and share on Twitter and Facebook. You can also subscribe for FREE to our weekly newsletters and bimonthly magazine.
Nanoplastics can reduce effectiveness of antibiotics
Using complex computer models, researchers were able to prove that nanoplastic particles can bind...
PFAS found in drinking water from around the world
Scientists have discovered toxic 'forever chemicals' present in samples of tap and...
Membrane removes low-concentration contaminants from water
The new membrane is designed so the captured molecules can be extracted into a solution for...