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Keyword: antibioticresistance

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  • Hybrid nano material targets antibiotic resistant bacteria

    09/09/2009 12:52:33 AM PDT · by neverdem · 1 replies · 405+ views
    Chemistry World ^ | 08 September 2009 | James Urquhart
    German researchers have developed a hybrid, light activated nanomaterial that can target, label and kill harmful antibiotic resistant bacteria such as Escherichia coli. The zeolite-based material may one day play a major role in both diagnosing and treating infectious diseases and possibly cancer, suggests the team.So-called 'photodynamic therapy' is a well-established technique in which a light source is used to trigger the action of a light-sensitive drug, and is already used to treat cancer and macular degeneration. However, scientists have been eager to develop cheaper therapeutic approaches with more functions. One such approach would be to develop a single nanomaterial that...
  • Engineered viruses fight bacteria

    03/02/2009 11:14:32 PM PST · by neverdem · 6 replies · 747+ views
    Nature News ^ | 2 March 2009 | Heidi Ledford
    Viruses that target bacteria could help give antibiotics a boost. An engineered phage renders E. coli more susceptible to DNA-damaging drugs.MedicalRF.com / Science Photo Library Biologists have engineered viruses to weaken the bacteria they infect, leaving the bugs more vulnerable to antibiotics. With more bacteria becoming resistant to the most commonly used antibiotics, the viral approach could extend the useful lifetime of these drugs.The notion of fighting infection by harnessing the viruses that infect and kill bacteria dates back nearly a century. Doctors in the former Soviet Union routinely prescribed a cocktail of such viruses — called 'bacteriophages' or just...
  • Superbugs abound in soil

    01/20/2006 6:52:28 PM PST · by neverdem · 31 replies · 753+ views
    News@Nature.com ^ | 19 January 2006 | Helen Pearson
    Survey of bacteria reveals an array of antibiotic-resistance. Bacteria that live in soil have been found to harbour an astonishing armoury of natural weapons to fight off antibiotics. The discovery could help researchers anticipate the next wave of drug-resistant 'superbugs'. Researchers have long known that soil-dwelling bacteria make natural antibiotics, and that they have inbuilt ways to survive their own and other bugs' toxins; in some cases, the genes that help them dodge antibiotics have transferred into infectious bugs that plague humans. Microbiologists have identified a few of the ways that soil microbes neutralize antibiotics. But Gerard Wright and his...