Google
Submit your scientific PR or story here
  • Headlines
  • Tech
  • Space
  • Animals
  • Earth
  • Science
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Health

New family of antibacterial agents uncovered

By ScienceMode on Jan 15th, 2009 in SM | Add story link to StumbleUpon

As bacteria resistant to commonly used antibiotics continue to increase in number, scientists keep searching for new sources of drugs. In this week’s JBC, one potential new bactericide has been found in the tiny freshwater animal Hydra.

The protein identified by Joachim Grötzinger, Thomas Bosch and colleagues at the University of Kiel, hydramacin-1, is unusual (and also clinically valuable) as it shares virtually no similarity with any other known antibacterial proteins except for two antimicrobials found in another ancient animal, the leech.

Hydramacin proved to be extremely effective though; in a series of laboratory experiments, this protein could kill a wide range of both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, including clinically-isolated drug-resistant strains like Klebsiella oxytoca (a common cause of nosocomial infections). Hydramacin works by sticking to the bacterial surface, promoting the clumping of nearby bacteria, then disrupting the bacterial membrane.

Grötzinger and his team also determined the 3-D shape of hydramacin-1, which revealed that it most closely resembled a superfamily of proteins found in scorpion venom; within this large group, they propose that hydramacin and the two leech proteins are members of a newly designated family called the macins.

Source: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Post this story to:    Del.icio.us    Digg this    Newsvine    Nowpublic    Reddit


Comments are closed.

Latest Science News

  • Kiwifruit Genetic Mapping, Sex Chromosomes Found
  • Amazonian amphibian diversity traced to Andes
  • Developing fruit fly embryo is capable of genetic corrections
  • What drove the cow mad? Lessons from a tiny fish
  • Barriers to adoption of electronic personal health records outlined
  • An age-old story
  • Study finds pay for performance stimulates changes in medical practice
  • Satellite spies on tree-eating bugs
  • Lobster traps going high tech
  • Getting into hot water
  • Teenage boys who eat fish at least once a week achieve higher intelligence scores
  • New insights on heart’s ‘fight or flight’ response to stress
  • Study links inflammation and calcium signaling in heart attack
  • UT Southwestern researchers probe mechanisms of infection
  • Worries about the future cited as a top reason for patients requesting physician-assisted suicide
  • Peer-to-peer heart monitoring
  • Substantial undercooling brings about microstructural change for ternary eutectic alloy
  • Quantum doughnuts slow and freeze light at will: ‘Fast computing and slow glass’
  • New published study demonstrates over-the-counter device lowers blood pressure in diabetic patients
  • Novel electric signals in plants
  • Inserting catheters without X-rays
  • Spinning carbon nanotubes spawns new wireless applications
  • How increased UV exposure impacts plants
  • Study prompts new mandate for N.C. high schools
  • When it comes to drinking, college men not looking for a ‘girl gone wild’

ScienceMode © 2006-2008 - About us

Log in