A versatile multicomponent mesoporous silica nanosystem with dual antimicrobial and osteogenic effects
Elena Alvarez, Manuel Estevez, Carla Jimenez-Jimenez, Montserrat, Colilla, Isabel Izquierdo-Barba, Blanca Gonzalez, Maria Vallet-Regi

TL;DR
This study presents a multifunctional mesoporous silica nanosystem combining antibiotics and metal ions, demonstrating enhanced antimicrobial and osteogenic effects for infection management and bone regeneration.
Contribution
It introduces a versatile nanosystem that co-delivers antibiotics and metal ions, improving antibiofilm efficacy and promoting osteogenesis, adaptable to clinical needs.
Findings
Achieved over 99% antimicrobial efficacy in vitro.
Demonstrated osteogenic differentiation promotion.
Validated versatility with different metal ions.
Abstract
In this manuscript, we propose a simple and versatile methodology to design nanosystems based on biocompatible and multicomponent mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSNs) for infection management. This strategy relies on the combination of antibiotic molecules and antimicrobial metal ions into the same nanosystem, affording a significant improvement of the antibiofilm effect compared to that of nanosystems carrying only one of these agents. The multicomponent nanosystem is based on MSNs externally functionalized with a polyamine dendrimer (MSN-G3) that favors internalization inside the bacteria and allows the complexation of multiactive metal ions (MSN-G3-Mn+). Importantly, the selection of both the antibiotic and the cation may be done depending on clinical needs. Herein, levofloxacin and Zn2+ ion, chosen owing to both its antimicrobial and osteogenic capability, have been incorporated.…
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Taxonomy
MethodsRepair
