Abstract
Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms comprise three main polysaccharides: alginate, psl, and pel, which all imbue tolerance against exogenous antimicrobials. Nanoparticles (NPs) are an exciting new strategy to overcome the biofilm matrix for therapeutic delivery applications; however, zero existing FDA approvals for biofilm-specific NP formulations can be attributed to the complex interplay of physiochemical forces at the biofilm-NP interface. Here, we leverage a set of inducible, polysaccharide-specific, expressing isogenic P. aeruginosa mutants coupled with an assembled layer-by-layer NP (LbL NP) panel to characterize biofilm-NP interactions. When investigating these interactions using confocal microscopy, alginate-layered NPs associated more than dextran-sulfate-layered NPs with biofilms that had increased alginate production, including biofilms produced by mucoid P. aeruginosa isolates from people with cystic fibrosis. These differences were further confirmed in LbL NPs layered with polysaccharide- or hydrocarbon-based polymers with pendent carboxylate or sulfate functional groups. These data suggest carboxylated NP surfaces have enhanced interactions specifically with mucoid biofilms as compared to sulfated surfaces and lay the foundation for their inclusion as a design element for increasing biofilm-NP interactions and efficacious drug delivery.
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