Navigation

 

 

 

 

 

 

  20 types of bacteria guide  
 

Advance in cholera bacteria points to new treatment and vaccine
Opening a new door to an effective vaccine and therapy for a disease that strikes thousands annually, researchers at Dartmouth Medical School discovered that the bacteria that causes the intestinal disease Cholera spreads in the environment in much the same way it infects humans. Appearing in the December 8 issue of the journal Nature, the study investigates the bacterium Vibrio cholerae and its ability to attach to a host, enabling it to multiply and adding to the risk of infecting humans.

"We've discovered, through genetics, a factor that is important in the normal biology of the organism out in the environment and it is also one of the very initial factors for cholera colonization in the intestine," said Dr. Ronald Taylor, professor of microbiology and immunology at DMS who led the research. "Now that we know what the bacterium attaches to in the intestine, we can find ways to block that initial contact."

Cholera and the bacterium that causes it is found in contaminated drinking water and food, often in underdeveloped countries and refugee camps. Once the disease takes hold, it causes diarrhea, vomiting, severe dehydration and can result in death if treatment is not promptly given. In 2001 alone, 28 countries reported over 40 outbreaks of cholera to the World Health Organization, resulting in the deaths of thousands.

Large outbreaks are often traced back to contaminated water supplies that are commonly associated with algal or zooplankton blooms. For the V. cholerae bacterium to infect someone with cholera, the bacterium often binds to plankton in the aquatic environment before it arrives at the human intestine via contaminated food and water sources. V. cholerae attaches to the outer surface of plankton, made up of a carbonate substance called chitin. Once attached to the plankton's chitin, the bacterium thrives on the carbon and multiplies. Humans do not have chitin in the surface of intestinal cells, where the bacterium takes hold, and researchers have been searching for another substance that could be responsible for playing a role in attachment.

In the study, Taylor and colleagues screened cultured intestinal cells and found mutant bacteria that had trouble binding to the intestinal cells. One mutant strain of V. cholerae lacks a gene that enables it to properly bind with a sugar called GlcNAc. When they compared it with normal, wild-type V. cholerae bacteria, the researchers found that the protein encoded by this gene provided normal bacteria the ability to attach to the GlcNAc on cells. The team verified

bacteria - Google News
Updated : Tue, 16 Mar 2010 23:06:03 GMT+00:00

New Powerful Microscopy Shows Antimicrobial Proteins Killing Bacteria - Medical News Today

New Powerful Microscopy Shows Antimicrobial Proteins Killing Bacteria
Medical News Today
US researchers have developed a new powerful microscopy technique and used it to show proteins killing bacteria in real time, thus revealing the deadly ...
New microscopy technique offers close-up, real-time view of cellular phenomenaNanotechwire.com

all 5 news articles »

Publ.Date : Tue, 16 Mar 2010 11:02:04 GMT+00:00

Gut Bacteria May be Driving Appetite and Contributing to Obesity - HealthNews

HealthNews

Gut Bacteria May be Driving Appetite and Contributing to Obesity
HealthNews
Certain types of bacteria that naturally reside in the intestine may be causing an increased appetite that promotes obesity as well as ...
Overweight? Blame bad gut bacteria which boost your appetiteDaily Mail
Wellnews: All the news that's fitSan Diego Union Tribune

all 4 news articles »

Publ.Date : Tue, 16 Mar 2010 16:27:33 GMT+00:00

Bacteria Maybe Next Weapon Against Crime - dBTechno

dBTechno

Bacteria Maybe Next Weapon Against Crime
dBTechno
Hundreds of bacteria found on our hands maybe the next key to who we are and could be the next weapon in the ongoing fight against crime. As it turns out, ...
Bacteria Maybe Next Big Weapon Against Common CriminalsdBTechno

all 2 news articles »

Publ.Date : Tue, 16 Mar 2010 16:58:01 GMT+00:00

Antiseptic Cloths Can Reduce Transmission of Treatment-Resistant Bacteria in ... - DG News

AsiaOne

Antiseptic Cloths Can Reduce Transmission of Treatment-Resistant Bacteria in ...
DG News
Chlorhexidine gluconate has broad activity against bacteria, yeasts and viruses and has previously been shown to reduce the acquisition of MRSA and other ...
Antiseptic baths help fight 'superbug' infectionsReuters
Effect of Chlorhexidine Whole-Body Bathing on Hospital-Acquired Infections ...Archives of Surgery

all 17 news articles »

Publ.Date : Mon, 15 Mar 2010 20:41:19 GMT+00:00

Rising Waters Could Lead to Bacteria Risk - Kansas City infoZine

Rising Waters Could Lead to Bacteria Risk
Kansas City infoZine
If the waters cover a source of bacteria, such as a landfill or stagnant stock pond, that bacteria can be added to the stream's contents. ...


Publ.Date : Tue, 16 Mar 2010 13:21:07 GMT+00:00

RSS to HTML
Website Traffic Promotion

that the GlcNAc in the intestine initiates the attachment and colonization of the bacteria by testing the mutant strain on zooplankton and cultured intestinal cells in vitro as well as in an in vivo cholera model.

"We set out to find factors that would reduce the bacteria's ability to bind to the epithelial lining of the intestine," said Taylor. "What's interesting is that we've identified a factor that works both in the environment and in the human body. This type of link hasn't been discussed before and it has a strong potential for vaccine and therapeutic development."

These findings could lead to a new form of therapy to treat people with cholera. "Now that we know that the bacteria are binding this particular sugar, we could essentially trick the infecting bacteria to bind to the sugar included in a derivative of oral rehydration therapy solution instead of the intestine," said study co-author Brooke Jude, a fourth-year PhD student at Dartmouth Medical School.

A vaccine for cholera already exists, but only works 50% of the time and people who take it are only immune for 12 months, according to Taylor. Taylor believes that a more effective vaccine could be developed by inducing the production of antibodies directed against the protein his research team has discovered, thereby blocking its function. This would inhibit an early step in the intestinal colonization process, and the bacteria would pass harmlessly through the body. The authors acknowledge that in addition to GlcNAc, there may be other points of attachment that could still be responsible for allowing the bacteria to bind to the intestine, and they are currently focusing their research to identify any other areas of attachment..

"There may be more of these factors and as we find them and knock them out, we'll decrease the ability for cholera bacteria to colonize even further," said Taylor.

Dartmouth Medical School


 
 
  Here are some articles to start with..  
 
 
Flesh-eating bacteria escape body's safety net
Researchers at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine have discovered that so-called flesh-eating "Strep" bacteria use a specific enzyme to break free of the body's immune Read more...
Different Types Of Urine Tests
By Groshan Fabiola
Nowadays different types of urine tests can be done to find if bladder infection exists. Three types of urine tests like urinalysis (U/A), microscopic urinalysis (U/A micro) and urine culture are Read more...