Abstract

The intimate relationship between bacteria and tumors has triggered a lot of activities in the development and design of bioactive materials to concurrently respond to antitumor and antibacterial demands. Herein, a pseudocatalytic hydrogel (AM-I@Agar) with intrinsic antibacterial and photothermal activities, synthesized by incorporating prefabricated amylose-iodine nanoparticles into low-melting-point agarose hydrogel, is explored as a bioactive agent for local treatment of subcutaneous abscesses and breast tumors. The AM-I@Agar hydrogel depicts the ability of pseudocatalytic O2 generation from H2 O2 to alleviate hypoxia. Meanwhile, the AM-I@Agar hydrogel exhibits temperature self-regulation features, beneficial for avoiding thermal injury during photothermal therapy owing to thermochromic properties. Upon local injection into a subcutaneous abscess, methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus is effectively eliminated by the AM-I@Agar hydrogel, and complete skin recovery is achieved in 8 d, demonstrating much better antibacterial effects compared with penicillin, a small-molecule antibiotic. AM-I/5-FU@Agar hydrogel, obtained after loading 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), significantly inhibits tumors in both normal 4T1 tumor-bearing mice and MRSA-infected 4T1 tumor-bearing mice models via a synergistic photothermal-chemo effect, and shows treatment efficiency superior to that achieved with photothermal therapy or 5-FU alone. This work provides a concept for the design and development of bioactive agents for potential management of bacteria-associated cancer.

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