Smart hybrid nanomaterials for chronic infections: microbiome-responsive and sustainable therapeutic platforms
Review article, 2025

Chronic wounds remain a persistent clinical challenge due to their complex pathology involving prolonged inflammation, microbial biofilms, and impaired tissue regeneration. Emerging research highlights the dynamic role of the human microbiome in modulating immune responses and influencing wound healing outcomes. Disruptions to this microbial balance, termed dysbiosis, not only exacerbate infection but also hinder therapeutic efficacy. Recent advances in smart and sustainable nanotechnology offer promising avenues to address these challenges. By integrating microbiome-sensitive mechanisms with targeted delivery systems, bio-based nanomaterials can overcome multidrug resistance, modulate inflammation, and accelerate healing. This review explores the molecular interplay between chronic infections and host immunity, highlights next-generation nanomaterials for regenerative applications, and proposes a sustainable paradigm that bridges clinical effectiveness with environmental responsibility.

Personalized medicine

Artificial intelligence

Microbiome therapy

Sustainable nanomaterials

Smart hybrid nanomaterials

Chronic infections

Author

Hina Singh

UCR School of Medicine

Sri Renukadevi Balusamy

Sejong Univ

Johan Sukweenadhi

University of Surabaya

Muthupandian Saravanan

University of Tabuk

Mohanprasanth Aruchamy

Saveetha Dental College And Hospitals

Ivan Mijakovic

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Systems and Synthetic Biology

Priyanka Singh

Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

JOURNAL OF NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY

1477-3155 (eISSN)

Vol. 23 1 698

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Infectious Medicine

Microbiology in the Medical Area

Biomaterials Science

DOI

10.1186/s12951-025-03712-4

PubMed

41184906

More information

Latest update

11/14/2025