Nanozyme-Based Robotics Approach for Targeting Fungal Infection

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School of Dental Medicine::Departmental Papers (Dental)
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Dentistry
Subject
assemblies
biofilms
Candida albicans
iron oxide
microrobots
mucosal
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2024-03-07
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Author
Oh, Min Jun
Yoon, Seokyoung
Babeer, Alaa
Liu, Yuan
Ren, Zhi
Xiang, Zhenting
Miao, Yilan
Cormode, David P.
Chen, Chider
Steager, Edward
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Abstract

Fungal pathogens have been designated by the World Health Organization as microbial threats of the highest priority for global health. It remains a major challenge to improve antifungal efficacy at the site of infection while avoiding off-target effects, fungal spreading, and drug tolerance. Here, a nanozyme-based microrobotic platform is developed that directs localized catalysis to the infection site with microscale precision to achieve targeted and rapid fungal killing. Using electromagnetic field frequency modulation and fine-scale spatiotemporal control, structured iron oxide nanozyme assemblies are formed that display tunable dynamic shape transformation and catalysis activation. The catalytic activity varies depending on the motion, velocity, and shape providing controllable reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. Unexpectedly, nanozyme assemblies bind avidly to fungal (Candida albicans) surfaces to enable concentrated accumulation and targeted ROS-mediated killing in situ. By exploiting these tunable properties and selective binding to fungi, localized antifungal activity is achieved using in vivo-like cell spheroid and animal tissue infection models. Structured nanozyme assemblies are directed to Candida-infected sites using programmable algorithms to perform precisely guided spatial targeting and on-site catalysis resulting in fungal eradication within 10 min. This nanozyme-based microrobotics approach provides a uniquely effective and targeted therapeutic modality for pathogen elimination at the infection site. © 2023 The Authors. Advanced Materials published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.

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2024-03-07
Journal title
Advanced Materials
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Wiley
Publisher DOI
10.1002/adma.202300320
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