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Showing posts with label DNA fragments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DNA fragments. Show all posts
Friday, 29 December 2017
Bacteria obtain resistance from competitor
Bacteria not only develop resistance to antibiotics, they also can pick it up from their rivals. In a recent publication in Cell Reports, Researchers from the Biozentrum of the University of Basel have demonstrated that some bacteria inject a toxic cocktail into their competitors causing cell lysis and death. Then, by integrating the released genetic material, which may also carry drug resistance genes, the predator cell can acquire antibiotic resistance.
The frequent and sometimes careless use of antibiotics leads to an increasingly rapid spread of resistance. Hospitals are a particular hot spot for this. Patients not only introduce a wide variety of pathogens, which may already be resistant but also, due to the use of antibiotics to combat infections, hospitals may be a place where anti-microbial resistance can develop and be transferred from pathogen to pathogen. One of these typical hospital germs is the bacterium Acinetobacter baumannii. It is also known as the "Iraq bug" because multidrug-resistant bacteria of this species caused severe wound infections in American soldiers during the Iraq war.
The emergence and spread of multidrug resistance could be attributed, among other things, to the special skills of certain bacteria: Firstly, they combat their competitors by injecting them with a cocktail of toxic proteins, so-called effectors, using the type VI secretion system (T6SS), a poison syringe. They are able to uptake and reuse the released genetic material. In the model organism Acinetobacter baylyi, a close relative of the Iraq bug, Prof. Marek Basler's team at the Biozentrum of the University of Basel, has now identified five differently acting effectors. Some of these toxic proteins kill the bacterial competition very effectively, but do not destroy the cells.
The predator bacteria take up the released DNA fragments. If these fragments carry certain drug resistance genes, the specific resistance can be conferred upon the new owner. As a result, the antibiotic is no longer effective and the bacterium can reproduce largely undisturbed. Pathogens with such abilities are a major problem in hospitals, as through contact with other resistant bacteria they may accumulate resistance to many antibiotics -- the bacteria become multidrug-resistant. In the worst case, antibiotic treatments are no longer effective, thus nosocomial infections with multidrug-resistant pathogens become a deadly threat to patients.
The T6SS, as well as a set of different effectors, can also be found in other pathogens such as those which cause pneumonia or cholera. Interestingly, not all effectors are sufficient to kill the target cell, as many bacteria have developed or acquired antitoxins -- so-called immunity proteins. Antibiotics and anti-microbial resistance have existed for a long time. They developed through the coexistence of microorganisms and enabled bacteria to defend themselves against enemies or to eliminate competitors. This is one of the ways in which bacteria can conquer and colonize new environmental niches. With the use of antibiotics in medicine, however, the natural ability to develop resistance has become a problem. This faces researchers with the challenge of continually developing new antibiotics and slowing down the spread of drug resistance.
haleplushearty.blogspot.com
Sunday, 20 August 2017
Genetic blood tests can expose cancer
Genetic blood test might expose different types of cancer at early stage,
the blood test discovered blood from DNA fragments released by cancerous tumours.
Examining DNA fragments for mutations found in cancer- causing genes leads to the discovery of blood of many early stage cancers. It exposed colon, breast, lung and ovarian cancers.
Early detection of cancers can leads to effective treatment from onset and save many lives, the test can screen out people without cancer. Genetic blood test for cancer must expose DNA mutations linked to cancer and ignore harmless mutations that is always present in healthy humans.
Exposing cancer and early treatment is the most important aspect of the discovery, differentiating deadly cancers that will hurt people from cancers that may not is very important for the success of the blood test.
haleplushearty.blogspot.com
Monday, 24 July 2017
New way of generating human antibody
Antibodies are blood protein produced in response to and counteracting a specific antigen. Antibodies combine chemically with substances which the body recognizes as alien, such as bacteria, viruses, and foreign substances in the blood.
They are produced by the body's B cells to fight infections like bacteria, viruses, and other invasive pathogens. When B cell recognizes a specific pathogen-derived "antigen" molecule, it can proliferate and develop into plasma cells that secrete large amounts of antibody capable of binding to the antigen and fending off the infection.
B cells need a second signal to start proliferating and developing into plasma cells. This second signal can be provided by short DNA fragments called CpG oligonucleotides, which activate a protein inside B cells called TLR9.
But treating patient-derived B cells with CpG oligonucleotides stimulates every B cell in the sample, not just the tiny fraction capable of producing a particular antibody.
Treating patient-derived B cells with tiny nanoparticles coated with both CpG oligonucleotides and the appropriate antigen. using this method, CpG oligonucleotides are only internalized into B cells that recognize the specific antigen, and these cells are therefore the only ones in which TLR9 is activated to induce their proliferation and development into antibody-secreting plasma cells.
Some of the anti-influenza antibodies produced by the method recognized multiple strains of the virus and were able to neutralize its ability to infect cells.
The method does not depend on the donors having been previously exposed to any of these antigens through vaccination or infection; the researchers were able to generate anti-HIV antibodies from B cells isolated from HIV-positive patients.
Researchers generate therapeutic antibodies for the treatment of infectious diseases and cancer.
haleplushearty.blogspot.com
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