Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Natural antibiotic resists ‘superbugs’

A petri dish holds yellow streaks of S. aureus bacteria

A newly discovered natural antibiotic, teixobactin, could be effective in treating bacterial lung conditions such as tuberculosis and those commonly associated with COVID-19, according to the new study.

As bacteria evolve, they develop strategies that undermine antibiotics and morph into “superbugs” that can resist most available treatments and cause potentially lethal infections.

The new work could pave the way for a new generation of treatments for particularly stubborn superbugs.

A team of researchers Professor Kim Lewis of Northeastern University led discovered Teixobactin in Boston in 2015. His company is now developing it as a human therapeutic.

The new research in mSystems is the first to explain how teixobactin works in relation to the superbug Staphylococcus aureus—also known as MRSA.

MRSA is among bacteria responsible for several difficult-to-treat infections in humans, particularly post-viral secondary bacterial infections such as COVID-19 chest infections and influenza.

The researchers synthesized an aspect of teixobactin to produce a compound that showed excellent effectiveness against MRSA, which is resistant to the antibiotic methicillin.

There was no way to stop bacteria like MSRA from developing resistance to antibiotics as it was part of its evolution, says Maytham Hussein a research fellow in anti-infectives at the University of Melbourne. This made combatting it extremely challenging.

“The rise of multi drug-resistant bacteria has become inevitable,” Hussein says. “These bacteria cause many deadly infections, particularly in immunocompromised patients such as diabetic patients or those with cancers, or even elderly people with post-flu secondary bacterial infections.”

The researchers are the first to find that teixobactin significantly suppressed mechanisms involved in resistance to vancomycin-based antibiotics that are recommended for complicated skin infections, bloodstream infections, endocarditis, bone and joint infections, and MRSA-caused meningitis.

The development could lead to new lung infection treatments and it would greatly facilitate the pre-clinical development of teixobactin, says Tony Velkov, a principal research fellow in pharmacology and therapeutics.

“Bacteria often develop resistance towards antibiotics within 48 hours after exposure,” Velkov says. “The bacteria failed to develop resistance towards this compound over 48 hours.

“These novel results will open doors to develop novel antibacterial drugs for the treatment of multi-drug resistant Gram-positive infections—bacteria with a thick cell wall—which are caused by certain types of bacteria.”

Source: University of Melbourne

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