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Keywords = antimicrobial materials

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12 pages, 272 KB  
Article
From Phenolic Profile to Gut Function: Comparative Effects of Region-Specific Shilajit on Selected Culturable Intestinal Microbial Groups and β-Glucuronidase Activity—A Preliminary Study
by Elham Kamgar, Małgorzata Gumienna, Barbara Górna-Szweda, Miroslava Kačániová, Przemysław Łukasz Kowalczewski and Joanna Zembrzuska
Molecules 2026, 31(12), 2172; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules31122172 (registering DOI) - 21 Jun 2026
Abstract
Shilajit is a complex natural phytomineral substance whose composition and biological activity may vary depending on geographical origin. This study compared three commercially available Shilajit samples from Russia (S1), Nepal (S2), and Iran (S3) in terms of phenolic acid profile, antimicrobial activity, and [...] Read more.
Shilajit is a complex natural phytomineral substance whose composition and biological activity may vary depending on geographical origin. This study compared three commercially available Shilajit samples from Russia (S1), Nepal (S2), and Iran (S3) in terms of phenolic acid profile, antimicrobial activity, and their effects on selected intestinal microorganisms and β-glucuronidase activity after simulated gastrointestinal digestion. The samples differed markedly in their phenolic composition, with S3 showing the highest total content of the quantified phenolic acids. All samples exhibited antimicrobial activity, although their intensity depended on the microorganism tested. The in vitro digestion model revealed clear sample-dependent effects: S2 showed the lowest net β-glucuronidase activity and the most beneficial modulation of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium, whereas S1 exerted the strongest suppressive effect on Escherichia coli. In contrast, S3, despite the richest phenolic profile, showed the highest β-glucuronidase activity. These findings indicate that the biological activity of Shilajit depends not only on the quantified phenolic acids but also on the broader, region-specific chemical matrix of the material. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Analyses and Applications of Phenolic Compounds in Food—3rd Edition)
55 pages, 2334 KB  
Review
Electrospun Nanofibers for Antimicrobial Therapy: From Polymer Design to Controlled Drug Release
by Andrei Teodor Matei, Oana Cramariuc, Irina Negut and Iuliana Gabriela Lupu
Coatings 2026, 16(6), 736; https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings16060736 (registering DOI) - 20 Jun 2026
Abstract
The rapid emergence of antimicrobial resistance has intensified the need for advanced therapeutic platforms capable of improving the efficacy, stability, and targeted delivery of antimicrobial agents. Electrospun nanofibers have emerged as highly promising materials for biomedical applications due to their large surface area, [...] Read more.
The rapid emergence of antimicrobial resistance has intensified the need for advanced therapeutic platforms capable of improving the efficacy, stability, and targeted delivery of antimicrobial agents. Electrospun nanofibers have emerged as highly promising materials for biomedical applications due to their large surface area, high porosity, tunable morphology, and ability to incorporate a broad range of bioactive compounds. This review provides a comprehensive overview of the design, fabrication, and biomedical applications of electrospun bioactive nanofibers functionalized with antimicrobial drugs. It presents the main nanofiber fabrication techniques, with particular emphasis on electrospinning and the influence of solution, process, and environmental parameters on fiber morphology and drug-loading efficiency. Natural, synthetic, and hybrid polymer systems commonly employed in electrospun antimicrobial nanofibers are analyzed in relation to their physicochemical properties, biocompatibility, and therapeutic performance. In addition, the review highlights different drug incorporation strategies, including encapsulation, immobilization, and surface coating, as well as the mechanisms of action of antimicrobial agents. Recent advances in nanotechnology-based antimicrobial systems and their role in overcoming analytical, biopharmaceutical, and drug-delivery limitations are also examined. Furthermore, the review addresses current challenges related to scalability, reproducibility, stability, and clinical translation of electrospun nanofibers. Finally, future perspectives focusing on multifunctional, stimuli-responsive, and personalized antimicrobial nanofiber systems are discussed as promising directions for combating bacterial infections and reducing the global burden of antimicrobial resistance. Full article
43 pages, 13727 KB  
Review
Adaptive Quantum Dot Biointerfaces for Precision Wound Repair
by Hossein Omidian, Kwadwo Amanor Mfoafo and Luigi X. Cubeddu
Nanomaterials 2026, 16(12), 774; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano16120774 (registering DOI) - 19 Jun 2026
Viewed by 85
Abstract
Impaired wound healing arises from interacting biological and material challenges, including persistent infection, biofilm formation, oxidative stress, unresolved inflammation, impaired angiogenesis, defective epithelialization, hemorrhage, and insufficient real-time assessment of wound status. Quantum dot (QD) and nanodot nanosystems have emerged as a versatile class [...] Read more.
Impaired wound healing arises from interacting biological and material challenges, including persistent infection, biofilm formation, oxidative stress, unresolved inflammation, impaired angiogenesis, defective epithelialization, hemorrhage, and insufficient real-time assessment of wound status. Quantum dot (QD) and nanodot nanosystems have emerged as a versatile class of bioactive wound interfaces capable of addressing these barriers through functions that extend beyond passive coverage. This review synthesizes the design rationale, material composition, validation strategies, functional outcomes, mechanistic interpretation, and translational relevance of QD-enabled platforms for precision wound repair. Across the reviewed literature, carbon dots, graphene QDs, black phosphorus QDs, metal and metal oxide QDs, transition-metal nanodots, and hybrid nanocomposites were incorporated into hydrogels, films, sponges, nanofibers, microneedles, scaffolds, membranes, sprays, and injectable matrices. Their major precision-enabling attributes include localized antimicrobial and antibiofilm activity, redox-adaptive behavior, photothermal and photodynamic activation, inflammatory and macrophage modulation, hemostasis, controlled therapeutic delivery, angiogenic and epithelial support, and fluorescence-based monitoring. The strongest conceptual advance is the transition from static wound dressings toward adaptive biointerfaces that can sense, respond to, or compensate for local wound state abnormalities. Nevertheless, the field remains largely preclinical, with important gaps in long-term safety, standardized characterization, clinically predictive models, manufacturing reproducibility, regulatory alignment, and human validation. Future progress will depend on rationally simplified multifunctional platforms, rigorous comparative testing, wound state-specific evaluation frameworks, and translation-oriented safety and usability studies. QD nanosystems therefore represent a promising foundation for precision wound repair, provided that their multifunctionality is matched by equally rigorous evidence of safety, reproducibility, and clinical relevance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nanobiomaterials in Therapy and Medical Diagnosis)
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33 pages, 705 KB  
Review
Chitosan-Based Technologies in the Food Industry: Functional Properties, Advanced Applications, and Future Perspectives
by Ioana Cristina Crivei, Roxana Nicoleta Ratu, Ionuț-Dumitru Velescu, Florin Daniel Lipșa, Florina Stoica, Andreea Bianca Balint, Ina Iuliana Pavel and Luciana Alexandra Crivei
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(12), 6197; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16126197 (registering DOI) - 18 Jun 2026
Viewed by 102
Abstract
Chitosan, produced through deacetylation of chitin from crustacean byproducts and, increasingly, fungal biomass and insects, is attracting food-sector interest because it combines antimicrobial activity, antioxidant capacity, biodegradability, and film-forming behavior in a single polymer. This review discusses how source, molecular weight (MW), degree [...] Read more.
Chitosan, produced through deacetylation of chitin from crustacean byproducts and, increasingly, fungal biomass and insects, is attracting food-sector interest because it combines antimicrobial activity, antioxidant capacity, biodegradability, and film-forming behavior in a single polymer. This review discusses how source, molecular weight (MW), degree of deacetylation, solubility, and charge density shape its performance in food systems. The paper then follows the main technological routes now tested or used: edible films and coatings, hydrogels, cryogels, nanoparticles, microcapsules, and hybrid matrices. These formats can protect fresh produce, meat, poultry, fish, seafood, and dairy foods, while also supporting beverage clarification, emulsion control, release of natural antimicrobials or antioxidants, and freshness monitoring in active or intelligent packaging. The evidence indicates strong promise, especially where microbial growth, lipid oxidation, moisture transfer, and short shelf life remain limiting factors. Yet, wider industrial use is still slowed by water sensitivity, sensory effects, raw-material variation, cost, process scale-up, and regulatory alignment. Future work should move beyond laboratory efficacy and address reproducible production, food-specific validation, and consumer acceptance. Full article
32 pages, 3894 KB  
Review
Silver Halides as Strategic Functional Materials: Resource Potential and Technological Evolution (1975–2025)
by Medet Junussov, Zamzagul T. Umarbekova, Maxat K. Kembayev, Ravil R. Gadeev, Gulnur Mekenbek and Moldir A. Mashrapova
Materials 2026, 19(12), 2636; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma19122636 - 18 Jun 2026
Viewed by 99
Abstract
Driven by advances in multifunctional materials design, silver halides—both natural (AgCl, AgBr, AgI, and mixed phases such as embolite) and synthetic—have emerged as versatile functional materials characterized by tunable crystallography, phase stability, and compositional variability. This study investigates global research trends, interdisciplinary development, [...] Read more.
Driven by advances in multifunctional materials design, silver halides—both natural (AgCl, AgBr, AgI, and mixed phases such as embolite) and synthetic—have emerged as versatile functional materials characterized by tunable crystallography, phase stability, and compositional variability. This study investigates global research trends, interdisciplinary development, and emerging application areas of silver halides through a bibliometric analysis of 23,841 publications indexed in the Web of Science (1975–2025). CDPI, TELM, VOSviewer, and Excel were employed to evaluate publication growth, disciplinary integration, and thematic evolution. Research output increased markedly after 2005, reaching approximately 700–1000 publications annually during 2020–2025. China (18.3%) and the United States (17.5%) were the leading contributors, while the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Russian Academy of Sciences, and CNRS showed the highest scientific impact. Materials Science Multidisciplinary (CDPI = 0.72), Chemistry Multidisciplinary (0.70), and Physical Chemistry (0.67) exhibited the strongest interdisciplinary integration, whereas Nanoscience and Nanotechnology demonstrated the fastest growth. Keyword co-occurrence analysis identified six major research domains focused on functional materials engineering, including environmental remediation, catalysis, crystal growth, antibacterial materials, interfacial processes, and electroanalytical systems. Recent studies increasingly emphasize structure–property relationships and synthetic control of crystal size, morphology, and surface characteristics to enhance performance in photocatalysis, sensing, antimicrobial coatings, and advanced optical applications. Overall, the results highlight the growing importance of silver halides as strategic functional materials and provide a quantitative framework for future research and technological development. A limitation of this study is its exclusive reliance on the Web of Science database, which may underrepresent relevant publications indexed elsewhere. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Materials Chemistry)
67 pages, 3784 KB  
Review
Light-Activated Antimicrobial Agents and Biomaterials for Bacterial and Fungal Infections
by Rostyslav Marunych, Dorota Bartusik-Aebisher, Barbara Smolak, Klaudia Dynarowicz and David Aebisher
Micro 2026, 6(2), 45; https://doi.org/10.3390/micro6020045 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 110
Abstract
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) represents a promising non-antibiotic strategy for addressing bacterial and fungal infections, particularly in the context of increasing antimicrobial resistance and biofilm-associated disease. PDT is based on the light-induced activation of photosensitizers, leading to the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), [...] Read more.
Photodynamic therapy (PDT) represents a promising non-antibiotic strategy for addressing bacterial and fungal infections, particularly in the context of increasing antimicrobial resistance and biofilm-associated disease. PDT is based on the light-induced activation of photosensitizers, leading to the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), including singlet oxygen (1O2), which induce oxidative damage to multiple microbial targets. Unlike conventional antimicrobial drugs that often act through specific molecular pathways, antimicrobial PDT produces simultaneous damage to membranes, proteins, nucleic acids, and extracellular biofilm components, thereby reducing the probability of resistance development. This review critically analyzes the cellular, biochemical, and biophysical determinants that govern PDT selectivity toward bacterial and fungal cells in comparison with mammalian host tissues. Particular attention is given to photosensitizer localization, membrane interactions, photobleaching, oxygen dependence, light penetration, and the balance between Type I and Type II photochemical mechanisms. The review provides a comparative overview of major molecular photosensitizer classes, including phenothiazines, porphyrins, chlorins, phthalocyanines, xanthene dyes, natural polyphenols, endogenous compounds, and advanced targeted photosensitizers. In addition, this review distinguishes molecular photosensitizers from nanotechnology-based platforms and delivery systems. Nanoparticles, polymeric carriers, hydrogels, and light-activated coatings are discussed not only as photosensitizer delivery tools, but also as systems that modulate aggregation, improve localization, enhance biofilm penetration, and enable surface-confined ROS generation. ROS are capable of causing phototoxic effects wherever they are located. Unless selectively accumulated by target organisms, there can be systemic phototoxicity. Overall, PDT should be regarded as a modular antimicrobial platform in which photosensitizer chemistry, formulation, light delivery, oxygen availability, and infection biology must be co-optimized. Although further studies are required to address clinical translation, regulatory complexity, material safety, and standardized treatment protocols, PDT offers a scientifically robust and clinically relevant approach that may complement conventional antibacterial and antifungal therapies, especially in localized, biofilm-associated, and device-related infections. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Microscale Biology and Medicines)
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45 pages, 5715 KB  
Review
Data-Driven Engineering of Antimicrobial Nanomaterials for Food Safety and Biomedical Systems
by Huy Loc Nguyen, Hong Minh Xuan Nguyen and Thi Bich Ngoc Nguyen
Nanomaterials 2026, 16(12), 764; https://doi.org/10.3390/nano16120764 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 361
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance and biofilm-associated contamination continue to pose critical challenges in food safety and biomedical applications, necessitating the development of advanced antimicrobial materials with enhanced efficacy, safety, and functional adaptability. Antimicrobial nanomaterials offer versatile solutions due to their tunable physicochemical properties, surface engineering [...] Read more.
Antimicrobial resistance and biofilm-associated contamination continue to pose critical challenges in food safety and biomedical applications, necessitating the development of advanced antimicrobial materials with enhanced efficacy, safety, and functional adaptability. Antimicrobial nanomaterials offer versatile solutions due to their tunable physicochemical properties, surface engineering capabilities, and controlled release behaviors, enabling improved antimicrobial and antibiofilm performance across diverse systems. This review highlights the main advancements in AI-assisted design of antimicrobial nanomaterials, demonstrating how data-driven approaches are increasingly used to predict antimicrobial activity, optimize synthesis parameters, model nanotoxicity, integrate multimodal datasets, and improve interpretability through explainable AI frameworks. Key findings indicate that machine learning-guided strategies and autonomous experimental platforms significantly accelerate material optimization while reducing reliance on traditional trial-and-error methods. The review further summarizes the performance and mechanisms of major antimicrobial nanomaterial systems, including metal and metal oxide nanoparticles, metal–organic frameworks, polymeric nanocarriers, nanoemulsions, and hybrid nanostructures, with emphasis on their translational applications in food preservation, antimicrobial coatings, wound healing, implant protection, and drug delivery. Despite these advances, challenges remain in data quality, model generalizability, toxicity prediction, reproducibility, and regulatory translation. AI-enabled and data-driven frameworks provide a powerful pathway for accelerating the rational design and practical implementation of next-generation antimicrobial nanomaterials. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Novel Nanoporous Materials: Design, Synthesis and Application)
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18 pages, 7246 KB  
Article
Bioactive Solution-Blown Polycaprolactone/Gelatin Nanofibers Loaded with Pistacia lentiscus Essential Oil: Toward Sustainable and Functional Food Packaging
by Ghizlane Akhouy, Nurcan Dogan, Ali Toptas, Manal Zefzoufi, Rabiaa Fdil, Faissal Aziz, Yasin Akgul and Islam Shyha
Polymers 2026, 18(12), 1511; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18121511 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 256
Abstract
Polymer-based active packaging systems incorporating natural bioactive agents have attracted growing interest as eco-friendly alternatives to traditional food packaging materials. In this study, Pistacia lentiscus essential oil (PLEO) was incorporated into PCL/gelatin nanofibrous mats fabricated via solution blow spinning (SBS) to develop multifunctional [...] Read more.
Polymer-based active packaging systems incorporating natural bioactive agents have attracted growing interest as eco-friendly alternatives to traditional food packaging materials. In this study, Pistacia lentiscus essential oil (PLEO) was incorporated into PCL/gelatin nanofibrous mats fabricated via solution blow spinning (SBS) to develop multifunctional and biodegradable active packaging materials. Neat PCL, gelatin-blended PCL (PCL–G) and PCL–G mats containing 5, 10 and 20 wt.% PLEO were produced and thoroughly analyzed for their morphological, chemical and functional characteristics. Morphological investigation revealed a smooth, bead-free fibrous structure in all samples. The average fiber diameter (AFD) increased from 239 nm to 320 nm with the addition of gelatin to the PCL matrix, while the incorporation of different concentrations of PLEO caused only minor changes. The results showed that as the concentration of PLEO increased, the antioxidant activity of the nanofibrous mats also increased. This enhancement is potentially linked to the rich content of bioactive molecules such as β-pinene, terpineol and verbenol. The 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl scavenging activity improved from 6.4% (PCL) to 60% (PCL–G–20PLEO), and ABTS activity rose from 8.7% to 72%. In addition, antimicrobial evaluation showed inhibition zones of 12.5 mm against Escherichia coli and 14.2 mm against Staphylococcus aureus for the PCL–G–20PLEO nanofibrous mats. In 14-day storage tests on Kashar cheese, PCL–G–10PLEO and PCL–G–20PLEO mats reduced microbial counts by more than 2 log units compared with the control and effectively slowed yeast and mold growth. These findings confirm the potential of the PCL–G–PLEO nanofibrous mat as novel active packaging materials for preserving dairy products such as Kashar cheese. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Polymer Applications)
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29 pages, 5125 KB  
Article
Sustainable Production of High-Performance Antimicrobial Scaffold via an Engineered Halomonas Dual-Product Factory
by Ehab Marwan-Abdelbaset, Xiaoyun Lu and Dan Tan
Biomolecules 2026, 16(6), 889; https://doi.org/10.3390/biom16060889 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 227
Abstract
This study presents a transformative “one-pot” biorefinery approach for the simultaneous production of hyaluronic acid (HA) and polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) using an engineered, non-pathogenic Halomonas bluephagenesis TD01 chassis. By leveraging the principles of Next-Generation Industrial Biotechnology (NGIB), a one-step fermentation process was developed in [...] Read more.
This study presents a transformative “one-pot” biorefinery approach for the simultaneous production of hyaluronic acid (HA) and polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB) using an engineered, non-pathogenic Halomonas bluephagenesis TD01 chassis. By leveraging the principles of Next-Generation Industrial Biotechnology (NGIB), a one-step fermentation process was developed in nutrient-rich 40-LBG-Y medium, achieving a balanced metabolic flux that yielded 1.99 g/L and high-molecular-weight (HMw) HA (9.6 × 106 Da) as the highest HA-Mw reported by heterogeneous bacteria, alongside intracellular PHB (0.68 to 1.6 g/L). A bioactive HA-PHB nanoparticle scaffold was fabricated, exhibiting a highly porous, interconnected 3D sponge-like architecture with a significant particle size shift from 12 nm to 450 nm, confirming successful polymer complexation. Antimicrobial evaluations revealed that the scaffold exhibited preliminary antimicrobial potential against representative Gram-positive and Gram-negative strains against Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella variicola, and Candida albicans. Notably, while Pseudomonas aeruginosa metabolically exploited purified HA, the integrated scaffold reversed this effect, providing preliminary antimicrobial potential by sterically hindering bacterial hyaluronidases. Furthermore, Halomonas-derived HA consistently outperformed Moringa oil and complex emulsions in preliminary tests against a wide range of pathogenic microbes. These results demonstrate that this dual-product platform provides a sustainable, cost-effective source of high-performance functional materials for advanced antimicrobial coatings and clinical wound management. Full article
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26 pages, 1010 KB  
Article
Antibiotic Consumption and Healthcare-Associated Infection Surveillance in a Multi-Unit Emergency Hospital in Romania: A Retrospective Observational Study
by Mioara-Calipsoana Matei, Valeriu-Aurelian Chirica, Marcel Ifrim, Cristina Morariu, Doina Spaiuc, Alina Manole and Mihaela Moscalu
Medicina 2026, 62(6), 1171; https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina62061171 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 185
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) remain a major challenge in emergency hospital settings, where high patient turnover and empirical antibiotic use may contribute to the emergence and spread of multidrug-resistant organisms. Monitoring antibiotic consumption is essential for antimicrobial stewardship and infection [...] Read more.
Background and Objectives: Healthcare-associated infections (HAIs) remain a major challenge in emergency hospital settings, where high patient turnover and empirical antibiotic use may contribute to the emergence and spread of multidrug-resistant organisms. Monitoring antibiotic consumption is essential for antimicrobial stewardship and infection prevention. This study evaluated antibiotic consumption patterns across multiple hospital units and explored their ecological relationship with HAI rates. Materials and Methods: A retrospective observational study was conducted in a tertiary-level emergency hospital in Romania between 1 January 2021 and 31 October 2025. Antibiotic consumption was quantified using Defined Daily Dose per 100 bed-days (DDD/100 bed-days) according to World Health Organization (WHO) methodology and categorized using the WHO Access, Watch, and Reserve (AWaRe) classification. HAI data were collected using standardized surveillance definitions. Statistical analyses were primarily descriptive and exploratory and included graphical trend assessment, simple linear regression for temporal trend description, and Spearman correlation analysis for exploratory ecological co-variation assessment. Results: Antibiotic consumption showed substantial variability across hospital units, without a consistent temporal trend over the study period. The Watch group predominated over the Access group from 2023 onward, while Access antibiotics remained below the WHO-recommended 60% threshold. The highest antibiotic consumption was observed in the Medical Wards, followed by Surgical Wards and the Intensive Care Unit. A total of 27 HAIs were identified (0.27 per 1000 patient-days), with the highest incidence observed in the ICU. The most frequent infections were Clostridioides difficile infections (33.3%) and catheter-associated urinary tract infections (29.6%). Exploratory ecological analyses did not identify robust associations between total antibiotic consumption and HAI rates across hospital units. A numerically elevated co-variation was observed between fluoroquinolone consumption and Clostridioides difficile infection incidence; however, this finding should be interpreted strictly as exploratory and hypothesis-generating. Conclusions: Antibiotic use varied across hospital units, with predominance of broad-spectrum agents and suboptimal adherence to WHO AWaRe targets. Reported HAI incidence remained low and should be interpreted within the limitations of routine surveillance systems and potential under-ascertainment. These findings support the value of continuous institutional surveillance of antibiotic use and HAIs while highlighting the limitations of aggregated ecological analyses. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Emerging Strategies in Infection Control and Antimicrobial Therapy)
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23 pages, 5126 KB  
Article
Synthesis and Comparative Investigation of Ortho-, Meta-, and Para-Carboxyphenylmaleimide–Styrene Copolymers
by Shahana Guliyeva, Aygun Alikhanova, Eldar Garaev, Jamila Yusifova, Gaëtan Herbette, Maxime Florent and Bakhtiyar Mammadov
Polymers 2026, 18(12), 1507; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym18121507 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 269
Abstract
The copolymerization of biologically active N-(carboxyphenyl)maleimides with styrene was systematically investigated to elucidate the effect of positional isomerism (ortho-, meta-, and para-) on monomer reactivity and copolymer properties. Reactivity ratios (r1, r2) were determined using [...] Read more.
The copolymerization of biologically active N-(carboxyphenyl)maleimides with styrene was systematically investigated to elucidate the effect of positional isomerism (ortho-, meta-, and para-) on monomer reactivity and copolymer properties. Reactivity ratios (r1, r2) were determined using the Fineman–Ross method, and Q–e parameters were evaluated within the Alfrey–Price framework, revealing distinct electronic effects governing copolymerization behavior. Increasing the maleimide fraction in the feed resulted in decreased copolymer yield, intrinsic viscosity, molecular weight, and glass transition temperature, while all copolymers remained styrene-rich, indicating preferential styrene propagation. Comprehensive structural characterization (NMR, FTIR, and UV–Vis) confirmed successful incorporation of both monomer units. Rheological analysis demonstrated a clear viscosity trend (ortho > meta > para), highlighting the influence of substituent position on chain interactions and macromolecular architecture. Thermal analysis (TGA/DTA) showed good thermal stability up to 250–300 °C. Notably, the copolymers exhibited significant antibacterial and antifungal activity, with maximum inhibition observed against Candida albicans. This study establishes a direct correlation between substituent position and structure–property relationships, providing new insights for the rational design of functional styrenic copolymers with potential applications in antimicrobial and biomedical materials. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Polymer Chemistry)
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20 pages, 8416 KB  
Article
Enhanced Antibacterial and Immunomodulatory Porphyrin-Based MOF Coatings for PETG Clear Aligners: A Comparative Study of Ag, Cu, and Ce Metal Centers
by Zhaoping Sang, Bowen Tang, Yunhao Zhuo, Lixin Li, Qi Zhang, Yinan Jin, Huiming Zhang and Gang Zhao
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2026, 27(12), 5411; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27125411 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 154
Abstract
Prolonged use of clear aligners promotes bacterial colonization and biofilm formation, which can compromise orthodontic outcomes. There is a clear clinical demand for approaches that can suppress pathogenic activity while preserving the fundamental functional and material characteristics of the aligners. To address this [...] Read more.
Prolonged use of clear aligners promotes bacterial colonization and biofilm formation, which can compromise orthodontic outcomes. There is a clear clinical demand for approaches that can suppress pathogenic activity while preserving the fundamental functional and material characteristics of the aligners. To address this need, a novel strategy of fabricating metal–organic framework (MOF) coatings on aligners was adopted. Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) have emerged as promising antibacterial coating materials by combining antimicrobial metal ions with biocompatible organic ligands. Three distinct porphyrin-based MOFs (Ag-, Cu-, and Ce-TCPP) were synthesized and fabricated as coatings on clear aligner surfaces via a coordination-driven self-assembly approach. The coated aligners were comprehensively assessed in vitro to determine their antibacterial performance, anti-inflammatory potential, biocompatibility, and key physical characteristics. Among the three coatings, Ag-TCPP showed the most favorable overall antibacterial and anti-biofilm performance in the present experimental system and facilitated macrophage polarization toward an anti-inflammatory M2-like phenotype. Ag-TCPP exhibited a significant inhibition zone of 6.75 ± 0.25 mm and reduced biofilm biomass by 72.2%. All MOF coatings exhibited excellent biocompatibility, and their application did not compromise the aligners’ mechanical integrity or aesthetic properties (light transmittance). This study reports the successful development of a novel metal–organic framework (MOF)-based coating strategy for clear aligners. Among the formulations investigated, the Ag-TCPP coating exhibited outstanding antibacterial and immunomodulatory performance while maintaining the critical mechanical integrity and aesthetic qualities of the aligner. The findings of this work offer a practical approach to designing multifunctional orthodontic devices that may reduce biofilm-related complications and improve clinical outcomes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Molecular Immunology)
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22 pages, 6940 KB  
Article
Comparison of Ginsenoside Content and In Vitro Biological Activity of Extracts Derived from Hairy Root Cultures and Field-Cultivated Roots of Panax quinquefolium
by Grażyna Szymańska, Weronika Gonciarz, Patrycja Jaroniek, Angelika Szymańska and Ewa Kochan
Molecules 2026, 31(12), 2117; https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules31122117 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 123
Abstract
Field-cultivated roots of Panax quinquefolium represent the natural source of biologically active compounds, e.g., ginsenosides, while transformed roots provide a controlled alternative for their production. Ginsenoside levels from both the sources were determined with the use of the HPLC method. The extracts were [...] Read more.
Field-cultivated roots of Panax quinquefolium represent the natural source of biologically active compounds, e.g., ginsenosides, while transformed roots provide a controlled alternative for their production. Ginsenoside levels from both the sources were determined with the use of the HPLC method. The extracts were tested for antimicrobial activity using the MIC and MBC/MFC methods, as well as for cytotoxic activity on the AGS (gastric cancer) cell line, Hs68 (human fibroblasts), and L929 (mouse fibroblasts) lines using the MTT assay. Additionally, the lack of pro-inflammatory activity of the plant materials was assessed using a monocyte activation test. The tested P. quinquefolium roots differed quantitatively and qualitatively in their ginsenoside profiles, and the highest amount was recorded in the transformed roots (204.62 ± 5.56 mg/g extract ± SE). The extracts exhibited the strongest antimicrobial activity against the Escherichia coli strain. Low activity of the tested extracts was observed against Candida species. In the tested cell lines (AGS, Hs68, L929), a dose-dependent decrease in cell viability was observed, with the field root extract exhibiting the highest cytotoxic activity in the concentration range of 2.5–10 mg/mL. All tested extracts proved to be safe and did not stimulate a pro-inflammatory response. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Biological Evaluation of Plant Extracts, 2nd Edition)
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65 pages, 3679 KB  
Review
Integrated Experimental–Theoretical and Data-Driven Multiphysics Analysis of Material Properties in Coatings, Pretreatments, Interfaces, and Artificial Intelligence-Assisted Reliability for Medical and Biomedical Devices
by Marshall Shuai Yang and Chengqian Xian
J. Exp. Theor. Anal. 2026, 4(2), 21; https://doi.org/10.3390/jeta4020021 - 15 Jun 2026
Viewed by 107
Abstract
Surface engineering strongly influences the performance, reliability, and safety of medical and biomedical devices, yet failures often originate at interfaces rather than in bulk materials alone. This review addresses the fragmented evidence base linking coating selection, interphase design, qualification testing, advanced characterization, and [...] Read more.
Surface engineering strongly influences the performance, reliability, and safety of medical and biomedical devices, yet failures often originate at interfaces rather than in bulk materials alone. This review addresses the fragmented evidence base linking coating selection, interphase design, qualification testing, advanced characterization, and data-driven durability analysis. The objective is to provide an integrative, failure-mode-based framework for implants, reusable instruments, inhalation systems, diagnostics, wearables, and implantable electronics. A narrative synthesis of the peer-reviewed literature in coatings, biomaterials, electrochemistry, reliability, standards, and materials informatics was conducted, with qualitative tables used only when protocols were too heterogeneous for numerical pooling. The review compares physical vapor deposition (PVD), chemical and plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition (CVD/PECVD), atomic layer deposition (ALD), sol–gel/organically modified silica (ORMOSIL) hybrids, plasma polymers, parylene, bioactive or antimicrobial surfaces, and electronic encapsulation strategies. The main finding is that no universally superior coating exists; reliable performance depends on matching architecture and characterization to the dominant failure pathway, substrate compliance, geometry, sterilization or physiologic exposure, and the standards-constrained endpoint. The review further shows how electrochemical diagnostics, interfacial mechanics, multiphysics models, survival/reliability statistics, and carefully governed AI workflows can be combined to support service-life prediction and decision-oriented qualification. Full article
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25 pages, 3562 KB  
Article
Bioactive Films: Cinnamon Oil Incorporation in Alginate/κ Carrageenan Films Enhanced by Limestone Sludge
by Joana Carrasqueira, Mafalda Guedes, Ricardo Baptista, Sérgio B. Gonçalves, Clélia Afonso, Maria Manuel Gil, Roberto Gamboa, Raul Bernardino and Susana Bernardino
Polysaccharides 2026, 7(2), 70; https://doi.org/10.3390/polysaccharides7020070 - 15 Jun 2026
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Abstract
This work aimed to develop bioactive films based on alginate and κ-carrageenan that were incorporated with different concentrations 0, 0.2, 0.4, 0.8, 1 and 2% (w/v) of cinnamon essential oil (CEO). The films were crosslinked with a solution of [...] Read more.
This work aimed to develop bioactive films based on alginate and κ-carrageenan that were incorporated with different concentrations 0, 0.2, 0.4, 0.8, 1 and 2% (w/v) of cinnamon essential oil (CEO). The films were crosslinked with a solution of calcium chloride obtained from limestone sludge through acid dissolution. The films were characterised according to their physical, mechanical, optical, antioxidant and antimicrobial properties. The best film formulation consisted of 1.5% total carbohydrate concentration, 0.45% glycerol and 0.4% (w/v) of Tween 20. The Fourier transform infrared Spectroscopy analysis confirmed the crosslinking between the polysaccharides and the incorporation of the CEO into the polymer matrix. The addition of the CEO increased the film thickness, reduced moisture content and water vapour permeability, yet it increased solubility, due to matrix disruption invoked by the oil droplets. SEM analysis showed that CEO affected film microstructure, with moderate concentrations leading to more homogeneous structures. In terms of the mechanical properties, CEO incorporation reduced stiffness and yield strength whilst increasing film flexibility, showcasing a plasticising effect. The films were colourless and transparent; moreover, none of the samples exhibited absorbance in the visible region (400–800 nm); however, all films showed absorption in the UV region. The incorporation of the CEO into the films provided antioxidant activity. Particularly, the sample containing 2% CEO had the highest activity, with values of 97.5 ± 0.77% and 75.9 ± 1.82% in the ABTS and DPPH, respectively. Overall, these results suggest that the developed films have promising potential as sustainable food packaging materials with enhanced antioxidant functionality, although further optimisation is needed to improve antimicrobial performance and validate their effectiveness in real food packaging systems. Full article
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