Abstract

The greatest bottleneck for photothermal antibacterial therapy could be the difficulty in heating the infection site directly and specifically to evade the unwanted damage for surrounding healthy tissues. In recent years, infectious microenvironments (IMEs) have been increasingly recognized as a crucial contributor to bacterial infections. Here, based on the unique IMEs and rhenium trioxide (ReO3) nanocubes (NCs), a new specific photothermal antibacterial strategy is reported. These NCs synthesized by a rapid and straightforward space-confined on-substrate approach have good biocompatibility and exhibit efficient photothermal antibacterial ability. Especially when they are utilized in antibiofilm, the expression levels of biofilm-related genes (icaA, fnbA, atlE, and sarA for Staphylococcus aureus) can be effectively inhibited to block bacterial adhesion and formation of biofilm. Importantly, the ReO3 NCs can transform into hydrogen rhenium bronze (HxReO3) in an aqueous environment, making them relatively stable within the low pH of IMEs for photothermal therapy, while rapidly degradable within the surrounding healthy tissues to decrease photothermal damage. Note that under phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) at pH 7.4 without assistant conditions, these ReO3 NCs have the highest degradation rate among all known degradable inorganic photothermal nanoagents. This special and IME-sensitive selective degradability of the ReO3 NCs not only facilitates safe, efficient, and specific elimination of implant-related infections, but also enables effective body clearance after therapy. Solely containing the element (Re) whose atomic number is higher than clinic-applied iodine in all reported degradable inorganic photothermal nanoagents under the PBS (pH 7.4) without any assistant condition, the ReO3 NCs with high X-ray attenuation ability could be further applied to X-ray computed tomography imaging-guided therapy against implant-related infections. The present work described here is the first to adopt degradable inorganic photothermal nanoagents to achieve specific antibacterial therapy and inspires other therapies on this concept.

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