Scientists discover bacterial cell suicide switchScientists in Israel have uncovered a chemical suicide signalling pathway that turns E. coli into the bacterial equivalent of lemmings, a discovery which could lead to a new generation of powerful antibiotics.
To find it, the team collected extracts from the media used to grow dense cultures of bacteria, and then picked through the chemicals individually to identify the EDF molecule, which turns out to be a short protein sequence. The researchers were then able to make an artifical version of the protein that could fool small numbers of E. coli into thinking they were part of a much larger population, which primed their mazEF cell suicide programme. When the bugs were then stressed with a small dose of an antibiotic, they obliged by killing themselvse. Coming at a time when the world is fast running out of antibiotic options, the discovery of this pathway could prove critical in the discovery of new ways to combat the rise of the superbug. 28th Oct 2007 |
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