Resistance is futile: making drugs from bugs
29 March 2006
Contact:
Professor Tony Maxwell: +44 (0)1603 450771
JIC Press Office and Out of hours: +44 (0)1603 450000
Antibiotic resistance is a major problem worldwide and there is an
urgent need for new antibiotics to be developed. Potential new drugs
are usually made in the lab which is complicated and time-consuming.
An international team of scientists are using bacteria found naturally
in the soil to produce new antibiotics in the fight against drug-resistant
“Super-bugs” such as MRSA.
Led by Professor Tony Maxwell of the John Innes Centre (Norwich, UK)
[1] and Professor Lutz Heide of the Pharmazeutisches Institut, Tübingen
(Germany) [2], the team has developed ways of engineering harmless soil
bacteria called Streptomyces to do the difficult chemistry for them.
Streptomyces naturally make antibiotics to kill other bacteria in the
soil. Unfortunately these don’t make very good drugs for use in humans
because they are not very soluble in water and so cannot get into the
bloodstream easily. The researchers have found a way to modify the bacteria
to manufacture new varieties of these antibiotics that could be developed
into more effective drugs. By studying variations of two natural antibiotics
produced by Streptomyces, called novobiocin and clorobiocin, the scientists
are determining which parts of the molecules are essential for their
antibacterial activity. They hope that by varying other parts of the
molecules they can design new antibiotics with better activity and fewer
side effects.
Novobiocin and clorobiocin work by interfering with how DNA, the molecule
that stores genetic information, is packed into the bacterial cell.
The DNA in human cells is packed differently and so these cells are
not affected by the antibiotics.
“This work is an excellent example of the European Union [3] at its
best, combining the forces of seven labs from five different member
states to carry out work that would not be possible by in lab working
alone” said Tony Maxwell “We are very optimistic that we can make key
discoveries about these antibiotics that will help them become vital
weapons in our fight against MRSA and other bacterial infections”.
This exciting work is published this week in the journal Antimicrobial
Agents and Chemotherapy [4] and will also be discussed at an event in
Norwich as part of the BA Festival of Science in September 2006 [5]
.
Notes for Editors
1. The John Innes Centre (JIC), Norwich, UK is an independent, world-leading
research centre in plant and microbial sciences. The JIC has over 800
staff and students. JIC carries out high quality fundamental, strategic
and applied research to understand how plants and microbes work at the
molecular, cellular and genetic levels. The JIC also trains scientists
and students, collaborates with many other research laboratories and
communicates its science to end-users and the general public. www.jic.ac.uk.
he JIC is grant-aided by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research
Council.
2. Pharmazeutisches Institut, Auf der Morgenstelle 8, D-72076 Tübingen,
Germany. Tel.: +49 7071-29 72460
3. This work is published in the journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy
(Volume 50, issue 4) (Publishers: American Society for Microbiology).
4. This work was funded by a grant from the European Commission (Combigyrase
LSHB-CT-2004-503466).
5. The BA (British Association for the Advancement of Science) Annual
Festival of Science runs from 2nd-9th September 2006 in Norwich, and
is the biggest public science event in the UK. It is expected to attract
over 10,000 people from around the world with the theme of “People,
Science and Society”. Further information at
http://www.the-ba.net/the-ba/Events/FestivalofScience/