Human nose houses a potential lifesaving antibiotic

Human nose houses a potential lifesaving antibiotic

When researchers at the University of Tübingen and the German Center for Infection Research (DZIF) were studying Staphylococcus lugdunensis, an antibiotic-resistant pathogen that colonizes the human nasal cavity, they discovered that this pathogen was seldom detected in the presence of Staphylococcus lugdunensis. This substance, which they named Lugdunin, is an antibiotic with the ability to fight multiresistent pathogens. An in-depth analysis of Lugdunin revealed that it has a new class of materials – a previously unknown ring structure of protein blocks. Since antibiotics are formed only by soil bacteria and fungi, the discovery of an antibiotic from human microflora has come as a surprise for researchers. Antibiotic resistance is a growing global concern. Therefore, the DZIF researchers are hopeful that this antibiotic would be effective where other antibiotics have failed to work.

Read more in Science Daily

期待学术生涯高歌猛进,发表过程一帆风顺?

来加入我们活力洋溢的在线社区吧。免费注册,无限阅览。

社交账号一键登入

已有54300名科研人员在此注册。

觉得有用?

如果是的话,和你的同事分享吧