HEALTH Gonorrhea researchers identify novel route to vaccine, new antibiotic

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
http://today.oregonstate.edu/news/gonorrhea-researchers-identify-novel-route-vaccine-new-antibiotic

Gonorrhea researchers identify novel route to vaccine, new antibiotic

July 05, 2018

STORY BY:
Steve Lundeberg, 541-737-4039
steve.lundeberg@oregonstate.edu

SOURCE:
Aleksandra Sikora, 541-737-5811
Aleksandra.Sikora@oregonstate.edu

CORVALLIS, Ore. – Researchers have identified a protein that powers the virulence of the bacteria that causes gonorrhea, opening the possibility of a new target for antibiotics and, even better, a vaccine.

The findings, published today in PLOS Pathogens, are especially important since the microbe, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, is considered a “superbug” because of its resistance to all classes of antibiotics available for treating infections.

Gonorrhea, a sexually transmitted disease that results in 78 million new cases worldwide each year, is highly damaging if untreated or improperly treated.

It can lead to endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy, epididymitis and infertility. Babies born to infected mothers are at increased risk of blindness.

“The infections very often are silent,” said Oregon State University researcher Aleksandra Sikora. “Up to 50 percent of infected women don’t have symptoms, but those asymptomatic cases can still lead to some very severe consequences for the patient’s reproductive health, miscarriage or premature delivery.”

The need for better antibiotic therapy, and a vaccine, is pressing. N. gonorrhoeae strains resistant to the last effective treatment options have emerged, and failures in treatment are occurring.

Sikora and her research team at the OSU/OHSU College of Pharmacy and Ann Jerse’s lab at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland, collaborated to discover a novel lipoprotein that N. gonorrhoeae uses to defeat the body’s first line of innate immune defense.

The body relies on enzymes known as lysozymes that, as their name suggests, thwart bacteria by causing their cell wall to lyse, or break apart. Lysozymes are abundant both in epithelial cells, which make up the tissue on the outside of organs and the inside of body cavities, and in the phagocytic cells that protect the body by ingesting foreign particles and bacteria.

In turn, many gram-negative bacteria – characterized by their cell envelope that includes a protective outer membrane – have developed ways of defeating lysozymes. Prior to the work by Sikora’s team, however, only one lysozyme-fighting protein had been discovered in the Neisseria genus.

Now that new targets have been identified, they can be explored as bullseye candidates for new antibiotics or a vaccine – if the lysozyme inhibitor can itself be inhibited, then the bacteria’s infection-causing ability is greatly reduced.

Sikora and her collaborators named the new protein SliC, short for surface-exposed lysozyme inhibitor of c-type lysozyme.

Studying SliC’s function in culture as well as in a gonorrhea mouse model – mice were infected with N. gonorrhoeae, then checked for SliC expression at one, three and five days – researchers determined the protein was essential to bacterial colonization because of its anti-lysozyme role.

“This is the first time an animal model has been used to demonstrate a lysozyme inhibitor’s role in gonorrhea infection,” Sikora said. “Together, all of our experiments show how important the lysozyme inhibitor is. This is very exciting.”

About the OSU College of Pharmacy: The College of Pharmacy prepares students of today to be the pharmacy practitioners and pharmaceutical sciences researchers of tomorrow by contributing to improved health, advancing patient care and the discovery and understanding of medicines.

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
For links see article source.....
Posted for fair use.....
https://www.theguardian.com/society...ses-immune-system-to-wipe-out-deadly-bacteria

New drug uses immune system to wipe out deadly bacteria

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are among those targeted by new ‘immunobiotic’

Layal Liverpool
Thu 5 Jul 2018 11.06 EDT

Scientists have created a new drug that hunts down and eliminates deadly antibiotic-resistant bacteria by engaging the body’s natural defences.

Researchers at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania fused part of an existing antibiotic with a molecule that attracts antibodies unleashed by the immune system to fight invaders such as bacteria.

The “immunobiotic” targets a range of bacteria responsible for diseases such as pneumonia and food poisoning, including those that often become resistant to last-resort antibiotics.

“The inspiration came mostly from the recent success of cancer immunotherapy,” said Marcos Pires, who led the study published in the journal Cell Chemical Biology.

Cancer immunotherapy, which Pires described as “game-changing” for patients, also harnesses the power of the immune system, but to destroy cancer cells rather than bacteria. The team wanted to find out whether the immune system could be used to help antibiotics work more efficiently.

“We anticipate the resistance would be slower to develop because of the double mode of activity – both traditional antimicrobial activity and the immunotherapy,” Pires said. “It should provide fewer mechanisms to escape the actions of our agents.”

Pires and his team tested the new compound on a range of bacteria declared by the World Health Organization as high-priority because there are so few drugs that work against them. Among them were Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a common cause of pneumonia in cancer patients, burns victims and people with cystic fibrosis.

Tests on nematode worms infected with Pseudomonas showed that the drug successfully targeted and wiped out the bacteria.

By sticking to the bacteria, the drug can inflict direct damage while acting like a beacon for antibodies that arrive en masse to finish the job. In the body, bacteria that become coated with antibodies get destroyed by white blood cells.

The researchers based their compound on an existing last-resort antibiotic called polymyxin, which damages the outer surface of bacterial cells, making them burst and die. Growing evidence suggests that this last line of antibiotic defence is under threat, meaning there is an urgent need for new antibacterials.

The new immunobiotic drug binds to molecules on the surface of bacteria that are not found on human cells. While the drug has yet to be tested in humans, the researchers saw no signs of toxicity when it was tested on animal cells.

“We believe the expansive difference in cellular composition between bacterial cells and healthy cells will provide the necessary window of selectivity to target bacterial cells without affecting the healthy human cells,” said Pires.


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Upon testing the new drug in combination with an existing antibiotic to which the bacteria were already resistant, the researchers discovered their drug re-sensitised bacteria to the other antibiotic. This result suggests older antibiotics, previously thought to be on their way out due to widespread resistance in bacteria, could still be useful in combination with this new drug.

Tim McHugh, professor and director of the UCL Centre for Clinical Microbiology, said: “The idea of using a molecule which targets the outer membrane of bacteria to enhance their responsiveness to drugs or antibodies is very attractive.”

The research is an important step in the fight against antibiotic resistance. McHugh said: “Bacteria are less likely to become resistant to drugs that target the immune system compared with drugs that target the bacteria more directly.” Bacteria can mutate and change their interaction with an antibiotic, but they cannot directly change our immune systems.

Immunobiotics, said Pires, “recruit antibodies that humans already have, so the advantage is that you don’t have to vaccinate the patient.”
 

Texican

Live Free & Die Free.... God Freedom Country....
Have sex with multiple partners and you could just win the prize of STDs or even AIDS the slow death....

Texican....
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Have sex with multiple partners and you could just win the prize of STDs or even AIDS the slow death....

Texican....

Yup. That will always be the case. What caused me to post these articles was the applicability of this technology to other infectious agents like MRSA and TB...
 
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