Mechanism of Antibacterial Activity of Photochemically Transformed Graphene Oxide

碩士 === 國立成功大學 === 環境工程學系 === 104 === This work examined the mechanism behind the antibacterial activity of graphene oxide (GO) before and after phototransformation in sunlight conditions. Our previous research has shown that GO can be phototransformed under simulated sunlight exposure, forming produ...

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Main Authors: Yu-ChiehChou, 周鈺捷
Other Authors: Wen-Che Hou
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/8bu7v2
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spelling ndltd-TW-104NCKU55151582019-05-15T22:54:13Z http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/8bu7v2 Mechanism of Antibacterial Activity of Photochemically Transformed Graphene Oxide 經光化學轉化後之氧化石墨稀的抗菌活性機制 Yu-ChiehChou 周鈺捷 碩士 國立成功大學 環境工程學系 104 This work examined the mechanism behind the antibacterial activity of graphene oxide (GO) before and after phototransformation in sunlight conditions. Our previous research has shown that GO can be phototransformed under simulated sunlight exposure, forming products with progressively reduced sizes and oxygen-containing functionalities. Depending on the phototransformation conditions, GO could become more toxic, while the toxicity was negated after phototransformation in the presence of H2O2 (i.e., indirect photolysis). While the finding is interesting and could aid in assessing the ecological impact of GO, the mechanism is not completely clear. This is the motivation of this study. New techniques including the antibacterial test of GO materials deposited on surfaces, cell morphology, membrane integrity using fluorescence dyes, and antioxidant effect, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) detection were developed and used to shed mechanistic light on the altered toxicity after phototransformation. The results indicate that bacteria incubated with phototransformed GO deposited on surfaces showed increased growth inhibition. The enhanced toxicity could be attributed to the reduced functional groups and/or sizes of GO after phototransformation. Greater cell deformation and increased membrane permeability correlated with larger extent of GO phototransformation. The growth of bacteria incubated with GO materials and antioxidants including natural organic matter (NOM) increased, indicating that oxidative stress likely plays a role. Collectively, the results indicate that phototransformation enhanced antibacterial activity is associated with oxidative stress that increases with the degree of phototransformation. Wen-Che Hou 侯文哲 2016 學位論文 ; thesis 45 en_US
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language en_US
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sources NDLTD
description 碩士 === 國立成功大學 === 環境工程學系 === 104 === This work examined the mechanism behind the antibacterial activity of graphene oxide (GO) before and after phototransformation in sunlight conditions. Our previous research has shown that GO can be phototransformed under simulated sunlight exposure, forming products with progressively reduced sizes and oxygen-containing functionalities. Depending on the phototransformation conditions, GO could become more toxic, while the toxicity was negated after phototransformation in the presence of H2O2 (i.e., indirect photolysis). While the finding is interesting and could aid in assessing the ecological impact of GO, the mechanism is not completely clear. This is the motivation of this study. New techniques including the antibacterial test of GO materials deposited on surfaces, cell morphology, membrane integrity using fluorescence dyes, and antioxidant effect, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) detection were developed and used to shed mechanistic light on the altered toxicity after phototransformation. The results indicate that bacteria incubated with phototransformed GO deposited on surfaces showed increased growth inhibition. The enhanced toxicity could be attributed to the reduced functional groups and/or sizes of GO after phototransformation. Greater cell deformation and increased membrane permeability correlated with larger extent of GO phototransformation. The growth of bacteria incubated with GO materials and antioxidants including natural organic matter (NOM) increased, indicating that oxidative stress likely plays a role. Collectively, the results indicate that phototransformation enhanced antibacterial activity is associated with oxidative stress that increases with the degree of phototransformation.
author2 Wen-Che Hou
author_facet Wen-Che Hou
Yu-ChiehChou
周鈺捷
author Yu-ChiehChou
周鈺捷
spellingShingle Yu-ChiehChou
周鈺捷
Mechanism of Antibacterial Activity of Photochemically Transformed Graphene Oxide
author_sort Yu-ChiehChou
title Mechanism of Antibacterial Activity of Photochemically Transformed Graphene Oxide
title_short Mechanism of Antibacterial Activity of Photochemically Transformed Graphene Oxide
title_full Mechanism of Antibacterial Activity of Photochemically Transformed Graphene Oxide
title_fullStr Mechanism of Antibacterial Activity of Photochemically Transformed Graphene Oxide
title_full_unstemmed Mechanism of Antibacterial Activity of Photochemically Transformed Graphene Oxide
title_sort mechanism of antibacterial activity of photochemically transformed graphene oxide
publishDate 2016
url http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/8bu7v2
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