Toronto Star

Potentiall­y powerful antibiotic found in dirtiest place of all

Scientists turn to ground beneath us where thousands of bacteria, and things that kill them, thrive

- SARAH KAPLAN THE WASHINGTON POST

The modern medical era began when an absent-minded British scientist named Alexander Fleming returned from vacation to find that one of the petri dishes he forgot to put away was covered in a bacteria-killing mould. He had discovered penicillin, the world’s first antibiotic.

Ninety years later, the world faces an antibiotic crisis. Superbugs have evolved resistance to dozens of drugs in doctors’ arsenals, leading to infections that are increasing­ly difficult to treat. Global deaths from antibiotic-resistant infections are predicted to hit 10 million a year by 2050. So in labs around the world, scientists are racing against time to cultivate new microbe-destroying molecules — but most of the low-hanging fruit has already been picked.

With due respect to Fleming, microbiolo­gist Sean Brady thinks it’s time to shift tactics. Instead of growing antibiotic­s in a petri dish, he hopes to find them in the ground.

“Every place you step, there’s 10,000 bacteria, most of which we’ve never seen,” said Brady, a professor at Rockefelle­r University in New York. Many of these bacteria behave in ways that aren’t yet understood and produce molecules that haven’t been seen before.

“Our idea is, there’s this reservoir of antibiotic­s out in the environmen­t we haven’t accessed yet,” Brady said.

That idea is beginning to pay off: In a study published Monday in the journal Nature Microbiolo­gy, he and his colleagues report the discovery of a new class of antibiotic extracted from unknown microorgan­isms living in soil. This class, which they call malacidins, kills several superbugs — including the dreaded methicilli­n-resistant Staphyloco­ccus aureus (MRSA) — without engenderin­g resistance.

You won’t find this antibiotic at your pharmacy next week, Brady cautioned. It takes years for a novel molecule to be developed, tested and approved for distributi­on. But its discovery is proof of a powerful principle, he said: A world of potentiall­y useful untapped biodiversi­ty is still waiting to be discovered.

Though antibiotic­s are prized for their ability to combat the microbes that make humans sick, most of them actually come from bacteria. For example, streptomyc­in, which has been used to treat tuberculos­is and plague, is produced by the bacterium Streptomyc­es griseus. (This microbe was originally found in the dirt of a New Jersey farm field, though the antibiotic research was conducted using cell cultures.)

Bacteria have been fighting one another for billions of years — far, far longer than humans have been around — so it’s hardly surprising that they have evolved all the best weapons. Yet the vast majority of these microbes don’t grow well under controlled laboratory conditions, making them difficult to study.

It would be better to derive interestin­g molecules directly from the environmen­t. And with the advent of metage- nomics, techniques that allow all the genetic material in a sample to be sequenced en masse, researcher­s can do just that.

For this study, Brady’s team cloned vast quantities of DNA from hundreds of soil samples contribute­d by citizen scientists across the country and then sorted through the material in search of interestin­g sequences.

“Most of what’s there is completely unknown, and that’s the future,” Brady said.

He and his colleagues were looking specifical­ly for a known gene associated with the production of calcium-dependent antibiotic­s — molecules that attack bacterial cells, but only when calcium is around. It’s thought that the existence of such an “on-off” switch may make it harder for microbes to evolve resistance. Because of this, the gene for calcium dependence might serve as a flag for a much longer sequence controllin­g the production of antibiotic­s.

Having identified a sequence containing the calcium-dependence gene, the researcher­s cloned it and injected it into a microbe that can be cultured. Soon enough, those microbes were making malacidins. When applied to cuts in the skin of MRSA-infected rats, the previously unknown molecule successful­ly sterilized the wounds. The bacterium didn’t show signs of resistance, even after three weeks of exposure.

According to Brady, malacidins work by interferin­g with the process that bacteria use to build their cell walls. Human cells rely on a different process, so the antibiotic isn’t toxic in people.

He and his colleagues don’t know what species the molecules come from, but they don’t need to — they already have the genetic blueprint for building it. “The effort now is to scale it,” he said.

Bacteria have been fighting one another for billions of years, so it’s hardly surprising that they have evolved all the best weapons

 ?? NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This digitally colourized microscope image shows Staphyloco­ccus aureus bacteria in yellow.
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This digitally colourized microscope image shows Staphyloco­ccus aureus bacteria in yellow.

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