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Green Synthesis of Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO-Based Bionanocomposite using Pomegranate Peels and Its Application in the Degradation of Bacterial Biofilm

The ability and potency of bacterial species to form biofilms, which show antibiotic resistance thereby avoiding antibiotic surfaces, is a major cause of prolonged infections. Various advanced approaches have been employed to prevent or damage bacterial biofilms, formed by a variety of bacterial str...

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Autores principales: Haque, Shafiul, Faidah, Hani, Ashgar, Sami S., Abujamel, Turki S., Mokhtar, Jawahir A., Almuhayawi, Mohammed Saad, Harakeh, Steve, Singh, Rajeev, Srivastava, Neha, Gupta, Vijai Kumar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9565895/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36234586
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano12193458
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author Haque, Shafiul
Faidah, Hani
Ashgar, Sami S.
Abujamel, Turki S.
Mokhtar, Jawahir A.
Almuhayawi, Mohammed Saad
Harakeh, Steve
Singh, Rajeev
Srivastava, Neha
Gupta, Vijai Kumar
author_facet Haque, Shafiul
Faidah, Hani
Ashgar, Sami S.
Abujamel, Turki S.
Mokhtar, Jawahir A.
Almuhayawi, Mohammed Saad
Harakeh, Steve
Singh, Rajeev
Srivastava, Neha
Gupta, Vijai Kumar
author_sort Haque, Shafiul
collection PubMed
description The ability and potency of bacterial species to form biofilms, which show antibiotic resistance thereby avoiding antibiotic surfaces, is a major cause of prolonged infections. Various advanced approaches have been employed to prevent or damage bacterial biofilms, formed by a variety of bacterial strains, to help prevent the associated infectious disease. In this context, zinc-based nanostructures have been recognized as a potential antibiotic agent against a broad spectrum of bacterial communities. As a result, a sustainable and green synthesis method was adapted in the present study to synthesize a Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO-based bionanocomposite, in which aqueous extracts of waste pomegranate peels (Punica granatum) were employed as a natural bioreducing agent to prepare the bionanocomposite at room temperature. Furthermore, FT-IR, XRD, DLS, UV-Visible, PL spectroscopy, FE-SEM, and TEM were used to characterize the green route synthesized a Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO bionanocomposite. The average crystallite size was determined using the Scherrer relation to be 38 nm, and the DLS results indicated that the Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO bionanocomposite had a hydrodynamic size of 170 nm. On the other hand, optical properties investigated through UV-Vis and PL spectroscopy explored the energy bandgap between 2.80 and 4.46 eV, corresponding to the three absorption edges, and it covered the blue spectrum when the sample was excited at 370 nm. Furthermore, the impact of this green route synthesized a Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO bionanocomposite on the biofilm degradation efficiency of the pathogenic bacterial strain Bacillus subtilis PF_1 using the Congored method was investigated. The Congored assay clearly explored the biofilm degradation efficiency in the presence of a 50 mg/mL and 75 mg/mL concentration of the Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO bionanocomposite against the bacterial strain Bacillus subtilis PF_1 grown for 24 h. This study can be further applied to the preparation of bionanocomposites following a low-cost green synthesis approach, and thus prepared nanostructures can be exploited as advanced antimicrobial agents, which could be of great interest to prevent various infectious diseases.
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spelling pubmed-95658952022-10-15 Green Synthesis of Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO-Based Bionanocomposite using Pomegranate Peels and Its Application in the Degradation of Bacterial Biofilm Haque, Shafiul Faidah, Hani Ashgar, Sami S. Abujamel, Turki S. Mokhtar, Jawahir A. Almuhayawi, Mohammed Saad Harakeh, Steve Singh, Rajeev Srivastava, Neha Gupta, Vijai Kumar Nanomaterials (Basel) Article The ability and potency of bacterial species to form biofilms, which show antibiotic resistance thereby avoiding antibiotic surfaces, is a major cause of prolonged infections. Various advanced approaches have been employed to prevent or damage bacterial biofilms, formed by a variety of bacterial strains, to help prevent the associated infectious disease. In this context, zinc-based nanostructures have been recognized as a potential antibiotic agent against a broad spectrum of bacterial communities. As a result, a sustainable and green synthesis method was adapted in the present study to synthesize a Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO-based bionanocomposite, in which aqueous extracts of waste pomegranate peels (Punica granatum) were employed as a natural bioreducing agent to prepare the bionanocomposite at room temperature. Furthermore, FT-IR, XRD, DLS, UV-Visible, PL spectroscopy, FE-SEM, and TEM were used to characterize the green route synthesized a Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO bionanocomposite. The average crystallite size was determined using the Scherrer relation to be 38 nm, and the DLS results indicated that the Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO bionanocomposite had a hydrodynamic size of 170 nm. On the other hand, optical properties investigated through UV-Vis and PL spectroscopy explored the energy bandgap between 2.80 and 4.46 eV, corresponding to the three absorption edges, and it covered the blue spectrum when the sample was excited at 370 nm. Furthermore, the impact of this green route synthesized a Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO bionanocomposite on the biofilm degradation efficiency of the pathogenic bacterial strain Bacillus subtilis PF_1 using the Congored method was investigated. The Congored assay clearly explored the biofilm degradation efficiency in the presence of a 50 mg/mL and 75 mg/mL concentration of the Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO bionanocomposite against the bacterial strain Bacillus subtilis PF_1 grown for 24 h. This study can be further applied to the preparation of bionanocomposites following a low-cost green synthesis approach, and thus prepared nanostructures can be exploited as advanced antimicrobial agents, which could be of great interest to prevent various infectious diseases. MDPI 2022-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9565895/ /pubmed/36234586 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano12193458 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Haque, Shafiul
Faidah, Hani
Ashgar, Sami S.
Abujamel, Turki S.
Mokhtar, Jawahir A.
Almuhayawi, Mohammed Saad
Harakeh, Steve
Singh, Rajeev
Srivastava, Neha
Gupta, Vijai Kumar
Green Synthesis of Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO-Based Bionanocomposite using Pomegranate Peels and Its Application in the Degradation of Bacterial Biofilm
title Green Synthesis of Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO-Based Bionanocomposite using Pomegranate Peels and Its Application in the Degradation of Bacterial Biofilm
title_full Green Synthesis of Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO-Based Bionanocomposite using Pomegranate Peels and Its Application in the Degradation of Bacterial Biofilm
title_fullStr Green Synthesis of Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO-Based Bionanocomposite using Pomegranate Peels and Its Application in the Degradation of Bacterial Biofilm
title_full_unstemmed Green Synthesis of Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO-Based Bionanocomposite using Pomegranate Peels and Its Application in the Degradation of Bacterial Biofilm
title_short Green Synthesis of Zn(OH)(2)/ZnO-Based Bionanocomposite using Pomegranate Peels and Its Application in the Degradation of Bacterial Biofilm
title_sort green synthesis of zn(oh)(2)/zno-based bionanocomposite using pomegranate peels and its application in the degradation of bacterial biofilm
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9565895/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36234586
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano12193458
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