Abstract

Hydroxyapatite (HA) combined with antimicrobial agents for biomedical application can effectively avoid the bacteria infection, while HA have the good performance. In this study, we prepared silver-hydroxyapatite (Ag-HA) nanocomposites using a one-pot method consisting of three sequential steps of wet chemical precipitation, ion exchange, and a silver mirror reaction. The HA nanoparticles used as the precursor for Ag ion doping were first synthesised by wet chemical precipitation. Next, Ag+ absorbed on HA surface through ion exchange reaction. Glucose was then added to initiate the silver mirror reaction, which made the Ag+ ions reduce to Ag0 and Ag nanoparticles in situ formed on HA nanoparticles. Subsequently, Ag-HA nanocomposites with different Ag content were prepared. X-ray diffraction, SEM, EDX mapping and TEM imaging confirmed that spherical Ag nanoparticles ~20–40 nm in diameter were adhered to the surface of HA nano-rods (0.4–0.8 μm in length and 15–40 nm in diameter). The Ag content (1.9–15.2 wt%) in the Ag-HA nanocomposites was adjusted by varying the feeding Ag/Ca molar ratio (2.0–20%). The cell viability evaluation in vitro proved that Ag-HA nanocomposites had low cytotoxicity to L929 normal cells. Meanwhile, the antibacterial examinations in vitro demonstrated that Ag-HA nanocomposites had obvious antibacterial effects on Gram-positive bacteria, Gram-negative bacteria, and fungus. The antibacterial results were dose-dependent on the accumulation of silver content. The Ag-HA nanocomposites loaded PMMA resins also demonstrated a potential antibacterial activity against S. mutans. This paper presents a convenient and bio-friendly approach for preparing Ag-HA nanocomposites with adjustable Ag content, which are a promising material for biomedical applications.

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