However, it looks as though MRSA may have met its match:
UK experts from the Universities of Kent and Newcastle found a new species of a common bacterium that lives in the sea beds of Japan can kill MRSA.As one of the researchers notes:
Actinomycete bacteria are known for their antibiotic properties. The new species, verrucosispora maris, produces a unique antibiotic, abyssomicin C.
"The ones from the bottom of the sea have not come into contact with disease-forming bacteria [on land] which therefore have not got any resistance to them."One wonders what else is down there. Unfortunately, we're more interested in searching the oceans for oil than medicine. The discovery of abyssomicin C shows just how useful it is to leave ecosystems intact until we know what's in them.
As a general rule, we should try to leave ecosystems intact even after we know what's in them. That's kind of a loose concept since all ecosystems nowadays are powerfully influenced by li'l ole us, but I think it's still a useful starting point.
ReplyDeleteOf course! I was being...well..."bitter" is probably the right word.
ReplyDeleteSounds like we agree completely.
DPR,
ReplyDeleteCervantes would be the expert, but I'll take a stab at it. SA is MR at this point largely because of overprescription/misuse...it would've happened anyway, as far as I know, but we helped it along considerably. And there are other forms of SA that withstand other antibiotics.
No idea how long it'd take for this new antibiotic...it'll depend how wisely we use it (and I should add that it's not ready to go yet).
And yeah...while we debate evolution, bacteria and viruses go blithely about their business. One of these ID clods was arguing that no beneficial mutations had ever been observed in nature...tell it to MRSA!