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In situ fabrication of metal-organic framework derived hybrid nanozymes for enhanced nanozyme-photothermal therapy of bacteria-infected wounds

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TLDR
In this paper, a metal-organic framework (MOF)-derived hybrid nanozymes antibacterial strategy for enhanced nanozyme-photothermal therapy (NPT) was proposed, which can not only prevent the aggregation of platinum nano-zymes and effectively reduce the mass transfer resistance during the kinetic reaction, but also inhibit the photoelectron-hole recombination in the process of photothermal therapy.
Abstract
In recent years, nanozyme-photothermal therapy (NPT) has attracted enormous interests owing to their enhanced therapeutic effects and less adverse effects in the treatment of infectious diseases. However, the development of nanozyme-photothermal agents (NPAs) that can rapidly, efficiently and synergistically combating pathogenic bacteria remains a huge challenge due to the limitation of size effect. Herein, by decorating platinum nanozymes on Zn-based photosensitizer, we report a novel metal-organic framework (MOF)-derived hybrid nanozymes antibacterial strategy for enhanced NPT. This strategy can not only prevent the aggregation of platinum nanozymes and effectively reduce the mass transfer resistance during the kinetic reaction, but also inhibit the photoelectron-hole recombination in the process of photothermal therapy (PTT) and improve the photothermal conversion performance. In the presence of a low concentration of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), the superior nanocatalytic activity of the MOF-derived hybrid nanozymes can effectively catalyze the release of H2O2 to generate toxic hydroxyl radical (•OH), resulting in the increase of bacterial membrane permeability and thermal sensitivity. Once the near-infrared laser is introduced, the nanozyme-photothermal antibacterial platform can play the role of “nanoknife” to further induce the death of the damaged bacteria by physical cutting. In vitro and vivo in antibacterial assays confirm that the MOF-derived hybrid nanozymes have excellent antibacterial properties, which can serve as an antibacterial candidate with negligible adverse effect. Therefore, this work will open a new avenue for MOF-derived hybrid nanozymes in biomedical application.

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Neutrophil-erythrocyte hybrid membrane-coated hollow copper sulfide nanoparticles for targeted and photothermal/ anti-inflammatory therapy of osteoarthritis

TL;DR: In this article , a hybrid membranes-coated hollow copper sulfide nanoparticles (D-CuS@NR NPs) were fabricated for osteoarthritis (OA) treatment, which achieved the synergistic treatment of mild heating, prolonged circulation, and targeted delivery in this system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Double crosslinking chitosan sponge with antibacterial and hemostatic properties for accelerating wound repair

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors used chitosan (CS) and graphene oxide (GO) to form a complex and followed by the introduction of tannic acid (TA) as secondary cross-linking agent after removing the acidity of CS.
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Visible-light-driven photocatalytic degradation of dye and antibiotics by activated biochar composited with K+ doped g-C3N4: Effects, mechanisms, actual wastewater treatment and disinfection.

TL;DR: In this article , an activated biochar-based graphitic carbon nitride composite (ACB-K-gC3N4 composite) was synthesized via the innovative ultrasonic-milling method.
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Nanozybiotics: Nanozyme-Based Antibacterials against Bacterial Resistance

TL;DR: It is proposed that nanozybiotics may bear promising applications in antibacterial therapy, due to their high stability, rapid bacterial killing, biofilm elimination, and low cost.
Journal ArticleDOI

Manganese‐Based Nanozymes: Preparation, Catalytic Mechanisms, and Biomedical Applications

TL;DR: In this review, the typical preparation strategies, catalytic mechanisms, advances and perspectives of Mn-based nanozymes for biomedical applications are systematically summarized and the application of Mn -based nanoZymes in tumor therapy and sensing detection, together with an overview of their mechanism of action is highlighted.
References
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Bifunctionalized mesoporous silica-supported gold nanoparticles: intrinsic oxidase and peroxidase catalytic activities for antibacterial applications.

TL;DR: Taking advantage of their prominent enzyme activities, the MSN-AuNPs show excellent antibacterial properties against both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria.
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Catalytic chemistry of glucose oxidase in cancer diagnosis and treatment

TL;DR: GOx can be combined with other enzymes, hypoxia-activated prodrugs, photosensitizers or Fenton's reagents, to generate multi-modal synergistic cancer therapies based on cancer starvation therapy, hypoxic-activated therapy, oxidation therapy, photodynamic therapy, and/or photothermal therapy.
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Incorporating Graphene Oxide and Gold Nanoclusters: A Synergistic Catalyst with Surprisingly High Peroxidase-Like Activity Over a Broad pH Range and its Application for Cancer Cell Detection

TL;DR: A synergistic graphene oxide-gold nanocluster (GO-AuNC) hybrid has been constructed as an enzyme mimic that is able to show high catalytic activity over a broad pH range, especially at neutral pH.
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Functional Graphene Nanomaterials Based Architectures: Biointeractions, Fabrications, and Emerging Biological Applications

TL;DR: This review elucidate FGNs-bioorganism interactions and summarize recent advancements on designing FGN-based two-dimensional and three-dimensional architectures as multifunctional biological platforms.
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