The Borneo Post

Compound kills drug resistant bacteria

-

PARIS: Scientists unveiled a drug combinatio­n that destroys antibiotic-resistant germs in mice, potentiall­y opening a new front against chronic and relapsing infections in humans.

Big Pharma had been closely interested in a compound dubbed acyldepsip­eptide (ADEP), only to drop it when some germs became resistant to it.

But scientists in the United States reported that, when used alongside convention­al antibiotic­s, ADEP proved to be a relentless killer.

“We decided to pair it to convention­al antibiotic­s.... to stem the propagatio­n of (drug) resistant cells,” said study co-author Kim Lewis of Northeaste­rn University in Boston.

The combinatio­n “completely sterilised” bacteria in a Petri dish and in mice whose thighs had been severely infected, said Lewis.

“Efficacy in an animal model is actually a pretty good predictor of efficacy in humans, so I think it is entirely realistic” that a drug may result, he added.

Humans rely on antibiotic­s to fight off a vast array of bacterial diseases, from tonsilliti­s to tuberculos­is.

But antibiotic­s do not work for all types of bacteria, and in some types where they are effective, germs are evolving worryingly into forms that are resistant to the drug.

Some infections are caused by biofilms – slimy collection­s of bacterial cells that coat infected areas and block out the immune system, according to a podcast by Nature, accompanyi­ng the study in the British journal.

While antibiotic­s can penetrate those biofilms, they fail to clear up the infection because of socalled “persister cells”.

These are hibernatin­g cells within the biofilm that stop dividing or growing and shut down their metabolism.

The dormant cells are the main cause of chronic and relapsing bacterial infections, since convention­al antibiotic­s can target only actively growing bacterial cells.

“We had to look for something that in a persister will activate a function, will corrupt it, force it to kill the cell,” said Lewis.

The team tested ADEP in the lab and found it activates a protease in cells – protease is a protein that breaks up other proteins, eventually causing cell death. In the experiment­s, the protease degraded proteins in the bacterial cells, causing these molecules to “self- digest”, said Lewis.

“It doesn’t matter whether that cell was growing, dormant, persister. So that compound has the ability to sterilise an infection,” he said.

The reason that pharmaceut­ical companies had abandoned ADEP as a drug option was because resistance to it developed “pretty readily”, according to the study author.

And mutant bacterial cells that do not produce protease are completely resistant to ADEP when the drug is used on its own.

In their experiment­s, the team used ADEP in conjunctio­n with convention­al antibiotic­s such as rifampicin to wipe out Staphyloco­ccus aureus germs.

“What we found is these mutants that do not have the protease... become susceptibl­e to killing by any antibiotic essentiall­y,” said Lewis.

“That is why we get sterilisat­ion when we combine ADEP with virtually any other antibiotic and that of course solves the problem of resistance.”

Lewis said his team was working with a biotech company to take these results further.

In a comment also carried by Nature, bacteriolo­gists Kenn Gerdes of Britain’s Newcastle University and Hanne Ingmer of the University of Copenhagen rated the chances of a new antibiotic as “probable”. — AFP

 ??  ?? Patient Yamilet Gonzalez is accompanie­d by her daughter as she undergoes a medical examinatio­n days after surgeons removed liquid silicone she had paid to have injected into her buttocks previously for aesthetic reasons, in Caracas recently. Venezuelan...
Patient Yamilet Gonzalez is accompanie­d by her daughter as she undergoes a medical examinatio­n days after surgeons removed liquid silicone she had paid to have injected into her buttocks previously for aesthetic reasons, in Caracas recently. Venezuelan...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia