Drug Developed Against Super Bacteria May Be A Solution To Bacteria


In a study conducted by Kim Lewis and colleagues from Northwestern University, an antibiotic called "Clovibactin" was isolated from bacteria grown with a device developed to grow an organism called "bacterial dark matter". According to the research results announced by the NovoBiotic Pharmacology company, the Clovibactin antibiotic acts on a wide range of pathogenic bacteria and can treat the "Staphylococcus aureus" superbug in mice. A group of researchers led by Bonn University Professor Tanja Schneider discovered that Clovibactin has an unusual mechanism of destruction and targets 3 different molecules required in cell wall formation.

The team used a special technique called nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) during the study of Clovibactin. Clovibactin may have potential for improved therapeutics.

Dr Markus Weingarth, a researcher from Utrecht University, stated that Clovibactin is different from other antibiotics because it is isolated from bacteria, while pathogenic bacteria do not have time to develop resistance to the drug in question.

Stating that Clovibactin wraps the pyrophosphate tightly, "like a cage", Weingarth said, "Since Clovibactin binds to the immutable, protected part of its target, it will be much more difficult for bacteria to develop resistance to it. In our studies, we did not observe any resistance to Clovibactin."

"This is probably the reason why Clovibactin selectively damages bacterial cells but is not harmful to human cells," Weingarth said, adding that the cell fibre in question only occurs in bacterial cell membranes and is not seen in humans.