The Free Press Journal

A dragon’s blood that may heal your wounds

Komodo, a large species of lizard, has a bloodline that can kill superbugs

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Inspired by germ-fighting abilities of the Komodo dragon, scientists have developed a new way to kill antibiotic-resistant bacteria while spurring the body’s cells to heal cuts faster. Komodo dragons live in bacteria-rich environmen­ts but rarely fall ill, suggesting they have strong innate immunity. “Synthetic germfighte­r peptides are a new approach to potentiall­y defeat bacteria that have grown resistant to convention­al antibiotic­s,” said microbiolo­gist Monique van Hoek from George Mason University in the US.

“The antimicrob­ial peptides we are tapping into represent millions of years of evolution in protecting immune systems from dangerous infections,” said van Hoek. The inspiratio­n for the synthetic germ-fighter called “DRGN-1” came from a peptide first found in a Komodo dragon named Tujah, who lives at the St Augustine Alligator Farm Zoological Park in Florida.

After creating a new tool and technique to find and sort through hundreds of peptides in Tujah’s blood, the team discovered one that showed a promising combinatio­n of antimicrob­ial and anti-biofilm properties.

Peptides are small proteinlik­e molecules, and some act at the forefront of our body’s innate immune system. They are the molecules battling infections until antibodies are made. The researcher­s found more than 200 Komodo dragon peptides, and it was one of these peptides that provided the inspiratio­n for DGRN-1.

The research team, including professor Barney Bishop from George Mason University, rearranged the peptide’s tiny building blocks, called amino acids, to create a modified, synthetic version of the dragon’s peptide, calling it “DRGN-1” in honour of the Komodo dragon.

This synthetic peptide is the first Komodo-inspired peptide the team created in the lab from this research, van Hoek said. “The synthesise­d peptide DRGN-1 is not a Komodo dragon’s natural peptide; it has been altered to be stronger in terms of both potency and stability,” van Hoek said.

DRGN-1 is able to attack the sticky biofilm that protects the bacteria and helps them grow in wounds.

After breaking down the biofilm barrier, the synthetic peptide kills the bacteria while simultaneo­usly stimulatin­g the patient's cells to speed up healing the wound. “The next steps for DRGN-1 are to develop it into woundheali­ng products for veterinary medicine before moving to products designed for humans,” Bishop said.

Komodo dragons live in bacteria-rich environmen­ts but rarely fall ill, suggesting they have strong innate immunity

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PIC: PHPLD.NET

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