Texarkana Gazette

Sea sponges may hold key to fighting killer infections

- By Anne Geggis

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.—The solution to a vexing—and deadly— for modern medicine could be lying on the ocean floor. Just like some insects have evolved to resist synthetic chemical insecticid­es, new infectious diseases have emerged over the past 20 years that can’t be controlled by the antibiotic­s doctors have at their disposal.

It could be sea sponges to the rescue, say a team of scientists, including some from Florida Atlantic University.

In a study published in the journal Frontiers in Microbiolo­gy in April, researcher­s identified several chemical compounds produced by microbes that live in deep-sea sponges. These secretions show promise in defeating antibiotic­infections such as M ethic ill in-resistant Staphyloco­ccus aureus (MRSA) and colostridi­um difficile (C.diff), which menace patients in hospitals and long-term nursing facilities and cause numerous deaths every year.

“There is this desperate need to find new antibiotic­s,” said Peter McCarthy, a marine microbiolo­gy professor at Harbor Branch Oceanograp­hic Institute, part of the FAU campus in Fort Pierce. “We have picked up many sponges that have never been seen before. So that led us to believe they contained microbes that had never been seen before.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention puts C.diff at the most urgent level of threat. MRSA is categorize­d as a “serious” threat.

The lab at Harbor Branch has sponge samples collected over the past 30 years from as deep as 3,000 feet under the sea off the coasts of the United States, the Caribbean, Europe and Africa. Studying these sponges, scientists have identified about 19,000 microorgan­isms that live in these sponges.

As part of the sponges’ natural defense against other organisms invading their space, these microbes produce compounds that keep the invaders away and sponges thriving undersea.

They’ve been testing how chemicals in the microbes that keep the sponges healthy react against the antibiotic-resistant diseases that threaten mankind.

“There is so much diversity and so much competitio­n down there. These microbes are creating the anti-bacterial compounds, ” said McCarthy, who is working with researcher­s at the University of South Florida, the University of Kentucky and the Central South University in Changsha, China.

Triggering the microbes to secrete these compounds in the lab, scientists have found the secretions are effective against deadly bacterial pathogens when they go head to head in a petri dish.

Researcher­s were able to identify a chemical defense from the sponges that appeared more potent than the medicine, vancomycin, given intravenou­sly to combat the C.diff. infection.

With funding from the Harbor Branch Oceanograp­hic Institute Foundation and the National Institutes of Health, researcher­s are identifyin­g how these microbes produce the antibacter­ial compounds so mankind can do the same.

‘We don’t fully understand why they are making chemicals,” McCarthy said. “We do not yet understand the ecology of it.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? ■ For more than 30 years, Florida Atlantic University Harbor Branch Oceanograp­hic Institute scientists have accumulate­d sea sponges and other macro-organisms using manned submersibl­es like the Johnson Sea Link submersibl­e shown above.
Associated Press ■ For more than 30 years, Florida Atlantic University Harbor Branch Oceanograp­hic Institute scientists have accumulate­d sea sponges and other macro-organisms using manned submersibl­es like the Johnson Sea Link submersibl­e shown above.

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