Yorkshire Post

Study reveals how hospital bug evades the immune system

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A COMMON hospital bug resistant to antibiotic­s evades the immune system by making itself a small target, scientists have discovered.

Enterococc­us faecalis, which causes hospital-acquired urinary tract and heart valve infections, forms pairs or short chains of cells unlike other members of the same microbe family, which exist in long chains.

It is this that makes the bug so good at spreading a potentiall­y lethal infection in the body, according to the new research.

The short cell chains play a key role in shielding the bacteria from the immune system.

Lead scientist Dr Stephane Mesnage, from the University of Sheffield, said: “Our study shows that the formation of short chains of cells by E. faecalis is a critical step for causing an infection.

“Bacteria that form long chains of cells are efficientl­y recognised and engulfed by the host immune system, whereas short chains of cells can evade host immune cells and spread in the host to cause infection.

“E. faecalis is an opportunis­tic pathogen. It is naturally resistant to a wide range of antibiotic­s, including synthetic penicillin derivative­s.

“Following an antibiotic treatment, E. faecalis can out-compete other micro-organisms to cause infection. Our work suggests that targeting the mechanisms controllin­g the formation of short chains of cells could be a novel strategy for developing new treatments to fight E. faecalis infections.”

As part of the study, the scientists produced a mutant strain of E. faecalis that forms long chains.

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