Potential Use of Copper Oxide Nanoparticles from Solanum trilobatum Against Pathogenic Bacteria

Recently, the biosynthesis of metal oxide nanoparticles using plant extract gained great attention compared to other methods. In this work, CuO nanomaterial was synthesized by using the leaf extract of Solanum trilobatum. Synthesized copper oxide nanoparticles were characterized by UV, FT-IR, XRD, SEM, and EDX to determine the functional group, crystalline size, shape, and elemental composition of the synthesized nanoparticles. The X-ray diffraction and SEM results confirmed that the synthesized CuO NPs were crystalline in nature and the average size was found to be 38.34 nm. The spherical shape of CuO NPs was reported in the green approach, but firsttime pentagons, cubes, and elongated forms of CuO NPs are found in this work. The EDX studies showed that the Solanum trilobatum mediated CuO NPs contain 53.57% of copper and 46.43% of oxygen. Synthesized CuO NPs were tested against the five pathogenic bacteria and they showed a very good zone of inhibition compared with copper sulfate and plant extract. Especially against Escherichia coli, Solanum trilobatum mediated CuO NPs performed well inhibitory effect.


INTRODUCTION
Bacterial diseases present unfavorable impacts on human wellbeing. Bacteria can affect any part(s) of the human body 1 . Bacterial diseases are the primary driver of persistent contaminations and mortality. An infectious disease caused by bacteria getting into the human body produces chemicals called a toxin, which can damage or destroy the tissues. Bacterial infections include urinary tract infections (cystitis), respiratory system/tract infections (laryngitis, pharyngitis, tonsillitis), gastrointestinal infections (inflammation in stomach, intestines), bone and joint infections (osteomyelitis, septic arthritis), soft tissue infections (pyoderma, necrotizing), skin infections (cellulitis, erysipelas), wound infections, burn infections, bloodstream infections (toxemia), and other clinical infections (neonatal meningitis, pneumonia) 2 . In this work five main infection-causing bacteria are used: Escherichia coli, Enterococcus aerogenes, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, and Proteus vulgaris which causes intestinal infections, respiratory tract infections, bone and joint infections, skin infections, and nosocomial wound infections respectively. All the above-mentioned bacteria in common cause urinary tract infection disease 3 .
Nanoscience/nanotechnology has been applied extensively in pharmacological activities (drug delivery, biological applications) to develop and improve the therapeutic outcomes of several diseases. Nowadays nanoparticles were increasingly used as an alternative antibiotic against various bacteria and bacterial infectious diseases [4][5][6] . Copper oxide nanoparticles are utilized to prevent infection, control bacterial infections (an antibacterial vaccine), treat infectious disease (as an antibiotic), promote wound healing, and generate microbial diagnostics (in bacterial detection systems) [7][8][9] . Other than antibiotic effects CuO NPs have reported numerous therapeutic outcomes such that, antioxidant effects, immunomodulatory, sunscreen, and anticancer. Copper oxide nanoparticles assume a significant part in the field of medication. Solanum trilobatum is said to possess good antimicrobial activity 10,11 . The present work aimed to explore the potential of Solanum trilobatum as a biosource for copper oxide nanoparticles synthesis. Furthermore, the antibacterial activity of copper oxide nanoparticles against Escherichia coli, Enterococcus aerogenes, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, and Proteus vulgaris was analyzed by the disc diffusion method.

Materials and reagents
C o p p e r ( I I ) s u l f a t e p e n t a h y d r a t e (CuSO 4 .5H 2 O) and ethanol (C 2 H 5 OH) were of analytical grades purchased from Merck. Preparation of the precursor copper solution is prepared by using the double-distilled (D.D) water.

Preparation of Solanum trilobatum extract
The fresh leaves of Solanum trilobatum were washed properly and shade dried. 500 g of powdered Solanum trilobatum leaves were taken in a 500 mL beaker and added ethanol solvent, mixed well, and kept aside for at least 3 to 5 days. After the complete extraction, the extract was filtered and the filtrate was stored in a refrigerator for future experimental work.

Preparation and Characterization of Solanum trilobatum Mediated CuONPs
50 mL of 0.1M copper sulfate solution were taken in 250 mL beaker and placed on a magnetic stirrer at 60°C. 10 mL of Solanum trilobatum extract was slowly added at every 30 min interval. After completion of the reaction, the reaction mixture was kept overnight at room temperature. Copper oxide nanoparticles were obtained by centrifuging at 6,000 rpm for 15 minutes. The precipitate was dried in an oven for the complete conversion of copper hydroxide into oxide. Finally, the purified copper oxide Nanoparticles (CuONPs) were further taken for characterization and microbial activity.
UV-spectrophotometer (Perkin Elmer make UV-Visible spectrometer and lambda 35 models) was used to characterize the optical properties of the synthesized nanoparticles. The Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (Shimadzu) was analyzed to detect the functional and chemical group (range of 4000-400 cm -1 ). X-ray diffraction (Shimadzu) studies were used to find the crystallographic structure of a material. The scanning electron microscopy (JEOL JSM-6480 LV SEM) was used to determine the morphology of the nanoparticles. Energy Dispersive X-ray Analysis (Bruker) was carried out to detect the elemental composition.

Antibacterial activity of Solanum trilobatum Mediated CuONPs
Antibacterial potential of synthesized CuONPs was investigated against the infectioncausing bacteria such as Enterococcus aerogenes, Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Proteus vulgaris by the disc diffusion method. Positive control was prepared using 10 ml of Amoxicillin as a standard antibiotic disc. The nutrient agar medium was prepared and sterilized by autoclaving at 121 o C 15 lbs pressure for 15 min then aseptically poured the medium into the sterile Petri plates and allowed to solidify the Bacterial broth culture was swabbed on each Petri plate using sterile buds. The extract, precursor, and nanoparticles were added to each well aseptically. This procedure was repeated for each Petri plate then the Petri plates were incubated at 37 o C for 24 hours. After incubation, the plates were observed for the zone of inhibition 12 .

Characterization of Solanum trilobatum Mediated CuONPs UV-Visible result of CuONPs and Solanum trilobatum extract
Preliminarily the formation of copper oxide nanoparticles was confirmed by the color changes in the reaction mixture, before and after adding the leaf extract. The color change from blue to dark green indicated the production of copper oxide nanoparticles. UV-spectra of Solanum trilobatum extracts and qualitative analysis reveal the flavonoids aromatics (nucleus) are mostly present in it which is shifted to 419 nm in the UV-spectrum of synthesized CuONPs. Flavonoids biomolecules in the extract play a key role in the conversion of Cu 2+ to Cu 0 (from Figure 1 & 2) 13,14 .
as terpenoids, polyester or flavonoids or phenolic compounds involved the reducing process 15,16 .

FT-IR result of CuONPs and Solanum trilobatum extract
FT-IR spectra and functional group involved in CuONPs synthesis illustrated peaks in the range of 400-4000 cm -1 (Fig. 3,4 and Table 1,2). The Solanum trilobatum extract shows a broad peak at 3396 cm -1 which indicates the presence of O-H groups and after the synthesis of Copper oxide nanoparticles, there is a shift in the broad peak to the 3434 cm -1 , which indicates that some polyhydroxy compounds, such    (004) planes respectively. Formed CuONPs were found to be monoclinic crystallite and are very close to those in the JCPDS File no. 5-0661 (Fig. 5). The result is similar to the reported data 17,18 . Peaks between 20 o to 30 o were due to impurity peaks i.e. plant compounds interference. The average crystallite size of the observed CuONPs calculated using the Debye Scherer formula was about 38.34nm.

Fig. 5. XRD spectrum of Solanum trilobatum mediated CuONPs
SEM images of CuONPs SEM micrographs (Fig. 6) of the CuO NPs obtained by the biosynthesis method revealed that the copper oxide particles were pentagons, cubes, and elongated with different sizes. They were also seen to be present in small aggregated/ clustered forms 19 . Usually, nanoparticle shape was depending on reducing agent concentrations. The reducing agent which has lower reducing power commonly forms the spherical shapes of CuONPs and the strong reducing agent forms the different shapes of nanoparticles.

Fig. 6. SEM micrographs of Solanum trilobatum mediated CuONPs
was used to find the elemental composition in the formed CuONPs. EDX of copper oxide nanoparticles revealed the presence of pure copper at 53.57% and oxygen at 46.43% as shown in Fig. 7. Another prominent peak seen may be due to the presence of minerals in the extract of Solanum trilobatum 20 .

Anti-bacterial results of Solanum trilobatum Mediated CuONPs
Antibacterial activity of synthesized copper oxide nanoparticles was investigated against five different pathogenic bacteria Escherichia coli, Enterococcus aerogenes, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Staphylococcus aureus, and Proteus vulgaris to amoxicillin. Synthesized CuONPs showed a very good zone of inhibition compared with the precursor and plant extract. Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Proteus vulgaris, don't show any inhibitory effect but copper nanoparticles revealed a noticeable zone of inhibitions. A maximum zone of inhibition was observed against the Gram-negative Escherichia coli 21 . (Table 3). Copper oxide nanoparticles have potential antimicrobial action given their enormous surface region, which clears the route for great contact with microorganisms 22 . The correct mechanism behind the destruction is not known, which has to be studied further in detail. As per the literature, Gramnegative bacteria show good inhibition than Grampositive bacteria 23 . The results indicate that the synthesized copper nanoparticles show effective antimicrobial activity against pathogenic bacteria.

CONCLUSION
In this work, the copper nanoparticles were successfully synthesized by green route from Solanum trilobatum leaf extract which acted as a natural reducing agent. The UV-Vis peak at 419nm confirmed the synthesis of CuONPs. The FT-IR spectral data confirmed the presence of some polyhydroxy compounds, such as terpenoids, polyester or flavonoids, or phenolic compounds involved in the reduction process of Copper. The particle size using XRD was found to be 38.34nm. The antibacterial activity against the Gram-negative bacteria i.e. Escherichia coli showed the maximum zone of inhibition. This study proves the biomedical importance of CuONPs on infectious disease-causing bacteria. It may use as good antimicrobial materials and finds application in the field of pharmaceutics.