Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

New antibiotic potentiall­y big in fighting drug-resistant bacteria

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WASHINGTON, June16 (AFP) - Scientists have discovered a new antibiotic that is highly effective against bacteria resistant to known antimicrob­ials, which was found in a soil sample taken in Italy.

Named “pseudourid­imycin,” or PUM, the new antibiotic is produced by a microbe found in the soil. It has killed a wide range of bacteria in laboratory tests and cured mice infected with scarlet fever. Details of the discovery were published on Thursday in the US scientific journal Cell.

Pseudourid­imycin neutralize­s an enzyme called polymerase that is essential to virtually all functions of every organism. However, it acts differentl­y than rifampicin, a class of antibiotic­s used to target the same enzyme. Its mechanism means the new antibiotic is 10 times less likely to trigger drug resistance than those currently on the market.

PUM killed 20 species of bacteria in experiment­s, proving especially effective against streptococ­ci and staphyloco­cci, several of which are resistant to multiple antibiotic­s. Clinical trials with PUM could begin within three years and the new antibiotic could be released on the market in the next 10 years, researcher­s at New Jersey's Rutgers-New Brunswick University and the Italian biotechnol­ogy company Naicons said. The discovery showed that bacteria found in the soil are the best source of new antibiotic­s.

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