Search results

Filters

  • Journals
  • Authors
  • Keywords
  • Date
  • Type

Search results

Number of results: 4
items per page: 25 50 75
Sort by:
Download PDF Download RIS Download Bibtex

Abstract

Chlorocresol nanoemulsion disinfectant (CND) is an environmental disinfectant prepared with nanoemulsion as its drug carrier. This study aimed to investigate the bactericidal effect of CND on Staphylococcus aureus ( S. aureus) and its effect on bacterial ultrastructure. The neutralizing effect of CND against S. aureus was first screened by suspension quantitative evaluation experiment procedure of neutralizer. Disinfection performance was evaluated by the determination of Minimal Inhibitory Concentration (MIC) and Minimum Bactericidal Concentration (MBC), quantitative bactericidal experiment, and comparative experiment of disinfection performance between 0.1% CND and 0.1% chlorocresol aqueous solution. Meanwhile, the effect of CND on the ultrastructure of S. aureus was investigated with scanning electron microscope (SEM) and transmission electron microscope (TEM) to preliminarily explore the bactericidal mechanism. The results showed that 3% Tween-80 in PBS could be screened as the neutralizer of CND against S. aureus. MIC and MBC were 100 μg/mL and 200 μg/mL, respectively. The bactericidal rates were all 100% when 0.06% and 0.08% disinfectant acted for 15 and 5 min, respectively. Furthermore, compared with 0.1% chlorocresol aqueous solution, the bactericidal effect of 0.1% CND was significantly enhanced (p<0.01). After treatment with CND for 10 min, SEM observation showed that the morphology of S. aureus cells were changed and the integrity destroyed. TEM observation showed that the cell shape changed, and the structures of the cell wall, cell membrane and cytoplasm were damaged in varying degrees. CND showed the strong bactericidal effect on S. aureus and could cause ultrastructure alterations of S. aureus.
Go to article

Bibliography

References:

Abdelmonem R, Younis MK, Hassan DH, El-Sayed Ahmed M, Hassanein E, El-Batouty K, Elfaham A (2019) Formulation and characterization of chlorhexidine HCl nano-emulsion as a promising antibacterial root canal irrigant: in-vitro and ex-vivo studies. Int J Nanomedicine 14: 4697-4708.
Badruddoza AZ, Gupta A, Myerson AS, Trout BL, Doyle PS (2018) Low energy nanoemulsions as templates for the formulation of hydrophobic drugs. Adv Ther 1: 1700020.
Boyce JM (2016) Modern technologies for improving cleaning and disinfection of environmental surfaces in hospitals. Antimicrob Resist Infect Control 5: 10.
Chen LH, Cheng LC, Doyle PS (2020) Nanoemulsion-loaded capsules for controlled delivery of lipophilic active ingredients. Adv Sci 7: 2001677.
Chepurnov AA, Bakulina LF, Dadaeva AA, Ustinova EN, Chepurnova TS, Baker JR Jr (2003) Inactivation of Ebola virus with a surfactant nanoemulsion. Acta Trop 87: 315-320.
Dancer SJ (2014) Controlling hospital-acquired infection: focus on the role of the environment and new technologies for decontamination. Clin Microbiol Rev 27: 665-690.
Eissa M, Ashour ED, Mansy MS (2012) Neutralizer evaluation study of some microbial isolates against two strong disinfectants with and without the presence of synthetic detergent. World Appl Sci J 20: 823-831.
Hamouda T, Hayes MM, Cao Z, Tonda R., Johnson K, Wright DC, Brisker J, Baker JR Jr (1999) A novel surfactant nanoemulsion with broad-spectrum spori-cidal activity against Bacillus species. J Infect Dis 180: 1939-1949.
Hamouda T, Myc A, Donovan B, Shih AY, Reuter JD, Baker JR Jr (2001) A novel surfactant nanoemulsion with a unique non-irritant topical antimicrobial activity against bacteria, enveloped viruses and fungi. Microbiol Res 156: 1-7.
Han JH, Sullivan N, Leas BF, Pegues DA, Kaczmarek JL, Umscheid CA (2015) Cleaning hospital room surfaces to prevent health care-associated infections: a technical brief. Ann Intern Med 163: 598-607.
Hashemnejad SM, Badruddoza AZ, Zarket B, Ricardo Castaneda C, Doyle PS (2019) Thermoresponsive nanoemulsion-based gel synthesized through a low-energy process. Nat Commun 10: 2749.
Hidber T, Pauli U, Steiner A, Kuhnert P (2020) In vitro and ex vivo testing of alternative disinfectants to currently used more harmful substances in footbaths against Dichelobacter nodosus. PLoS One 15: e0229066.
Horstmann Risso N, Ottonelli Stopiglia CD, Oliveira MT, Haas SE, Ramos Maciel T, Reginatto Lazzari N, Kelmer EL, Pinto Vilela JA, Beckmann DV (2020) Chlorhexidine nanoemulsion: a new antiseptic formulation. Int J Nanomedicine 15: 6935-6944.
Hu GZ, Qiu YS (2010) Medicines commonly used in poultry and their rational use. Henan Science and Technology Press, Zhengzhou, p 27.
Matsubara T, Maki S, Toshimori Y (2021) The effectiveness of a nonalcoholic disinfectant containing metal ions, with broad antimicrobial activity. Sci Rep 11: 1072.
Ministry of Health of the People’s Republic of China (2008) Technical standard for disinfection. Ministry of Health of the People’s Republic of China, Beijing, pp 21-52.
Mu SY, Liu DY, Bai YZ, Yang WY, Shi YL, Li S, Ning MX, Yang XF (2016) Disinfection efficacy of chlorocresol nanoemulsion disin-fectant. Chin J Vet Med 52: 35-37.
Ramalingam K, Frohlich NC, Lee VA (2013) Effect of nanoemulsion on dental unit waterline biofilm. J Dent Sci 8: 333-336.
Roedel A, Vincze S, Projahn M, Roesler U, Robé C, Hammerl JA, Noll M, Al Dahouk S, Dieckmann R (2021) Genetic but no phenotypic associations between biocide tolerance and antibiotic resistance in Escherichia coli from german broiler fattening farms. Microorganisms 9: 651.
Wei QH, Zhang WF, Wang CD, Lu Y, Wang JY, Zhang M (2004) Experimental observation on properties of a compound germicidal nanoemulsion. Chin J Dis 21: 1-4.
Yang XF, Qi YH, Ning HM, Wang QH (2012) Preparation and quality evaluation of enrofloxacin nanoemulsion. J Zhejiang Univ (Agric & Life Sci) 38: 693-699.
Yang XF, Sun YW, Mu SY, Liu DY, Hu JH, Xu YZ, Bai YZ, Shi YL (2016) Evaluation of characterization and disinfection efficacy of chlorocresol nanoemulsion disinfectant. RSC Adv 6: 12730-12736.
Yin M, Zhang DL, Sun YJ, Li XH, Li YY, Xu P, Xue MQ, Jin MY, Yang XF (2020) Fungicidal effect of chlorcresol nanoemulsion disinfectant. J Northwest A&F Univ (Nat Sci Ed) 48: 18-23.
Go to article

Authors and Affiliations

Y.F. Zhang
1
Y.W. Sun
1
X.H. Liu
1
Z.X. An
1
X.F. Yang
1

  1. College of Animal Science and Veterinary Medicine, Henan Institute of Science and Technology, Hualan Road No. 90, Xinxiang City, Henan Province, 453003, China
Download PDF Download RIS Download Bibtex

Abstract

Telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) vectors were transfected into bone marrow mesen- chymal stem cells (BMSCs) which were then cultured and selected to establish TERT-BMSC cell lines whilst sequencing BMSCs and TERT-BMSCs via transcriptome in this study to explore their regulatory mechanism and effect on osteogenic differentiation after TERT ectopic expres- sion in sheep BMSCs. After sequencing and analysing differential genes, PI3K/Akt signalling pathway related to osteogenic differentiation was investigated. Western blot was used before and after applying the PI3K/Akt signalling pathway inhibitor LY294002 to detect protein expression levels of AKT and p-AKT. On the twenty-first day of osteogenic differentiation, RT-qPCR and Western blot were used to detect mRNA and protein expression levels of RUNX2 and OPN and alizarin red staining was utilised to analyse calcium salt deposition. Results showed that pro- tein expression levels of AKT and p-AKT were significantly up-regulated, mRNA and protein expression levels of RUNX2 and OPN increased and calcium salt deposition increased after ectopic expression of TERT. After applying LY294002, the protein expression of AKT and p-AKT was down-regulated, mRNA and protein expression levels of RUNX2 and OPN were reduced and calcium salt deposition was reduced. These results confirmed the stable integration and expression of the exogenous TERT gene in BMSCs to promote the differentiation of BMSC osteoblasts, which may be mediated by the PI3K/Akt signalling pathway.

Go to article

Authors and Affiliations

X. Zhu
L. Zhou
Z. Liu
X. Chen
L. Wei
Z. Zhang
Y. Liu
Y. Zhu
Y. Wang
ORCID: ORCID
X. Yang
Y. Han

This page uses 'cookies'. Learn more