The Palm Beach Post

Common weed could help fight deadly superbug, study finds

- By Lena H. Sun Washington Post

The red berries of a weed found in the southern United States contain an compound that can disarm a deadly superbug, according to research published Friday.

Researcher­s from Emory University and the University of Iowa found that extracts from the Brazilian peppertree, which traditiona­l healers in the Amazon have used for hundreds of years to treat skin and soft-tissue infections, have the power to stop methicilli­n-resistant Staphyloco­ccus aureus (MRSA) infections in mice. The study was published in Nature’s Scientific Reports.

Cassandra Quave, an Emory University scientist who studies how indigenous people use plants in healing practices, said researcher­s pulled apart the chemical ingredient­s of the berries and tested them in mice infected with these superbug strains.

The mice developed skin lesions where the bacteria were injected. The researcher­s then injected some mice with the pepper extracts, and their lesions shrunk. Instead of destroying the bacteria, the ingredient­s in the fruit weakened the bacteria by preventing them from producing the toxins it uses as weapons to damage tissue. The extracts from the fruit repress a gene that allows the bacterial cells to communicat­e with one another.

“It weakens the bacteria so the mouse’s own defenses work better” to clear the infection, she said.

The plant extracts prevented the formation of skin lesions in mice injected with MRSA, but didn’t harm the skin tissues or the normal, healthy bacteria found on skin.

The discovery may hold the potential for new ways to treat and prevent antimicrob­ialresista­nt infections, an enormous global problem that was the focus of a rare high-level United Nations summit last fall.

MRSA has become a serious threat to human health; in 2011, it was responsibl­e for more than 80,000 invasive infections and more than 11,000 deaths in the United States, according to federal statistics.

Antimicrob­ial resistance refers to infections that have evolved the ability to withstand drugs that ought to stop them. The medicines include antibiotic­s, which act on bacteria, as well as drugs to fight fungal, viral or parasitic infections.

Fighting bacteria with drugs designed to kill them helps fuel the problem of antibiotic resistance if stronger bacteria can survive and evolve to become “super bugs.”

“But instead of always setting a bomb off to kill an infection, there are situations where using an anti-virulence method may be just as effective, while also helping to restore balance to the health of the patient,” said Quave.

P l a n t s h ave b e e n u s e d repeatedly in traditiona­l medicine over the centuries, and knowledge about their use is passed down from generation to generation, which points to their efficacy, she said.

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 ??  ?? Cassandra Quave, an ethnobotan­ist at Emory University, in her lab with berries from the Brazilian peppertree.
Cassandra Quave, an ethnobotan­ist at Emory University, in her lab with berries from the Brazilian peppertree.
 ?? PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY EMORY ?? Researcher­s say the red berries of this weedy species, the Brazilian peppertree, contain an extract that can disarm a deadly superbug.
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY EMORY Researcher­s say the red berries of this weedy species, the Brazilian peppertree, contain an extract that can disarm a deadly superbug.
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