Biologists Program E. Coli To Patrol For Pathogens 38
MTorrice writes "When hospital patients develop nasty, antibiotic-resistant infections, the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa is often the culprit. In a new approach to killing the pathogen, researchers genetically modified harmless Escherichia coli bacteria to detect and destroy P. aeruginosa. The E. coli spot a specific chemical released by the pathogen and then secrete a toxin to kill it (abstract)."
Re:What could (Score:4, Funny)
Toxin (Score:2)
Bacteria can share DNA [wikipedia.org] with other bacteria. (I don't know if it applies here, but I don't know that it doesn't) If the DNA for this toxin jumps to a different strain of bacteria (say... Pseudomonas aeruginosa) and becomes an infection... We need to ask what this toxin does to human tissue. If it isn't harmless, we could be building a drug resistant, toxin spewing bacteria!
That's one thing that could go wrong.
(No, I didn't read the article. I'm just assuming it doesn't cover this eventuality.)
Re:The Time has come.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Here we are (hopefully) harnessing it for our own safety.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Why would (most) of the bacteria in our bodies want to disrupt the sweet gig they've got?
We work our fool polycellular asses off trying to maintain nice, stable, internal conditions, complete with nutrients and an immune system with a vested interest in kicking out the troublemakers...
You aren't going to find a better deal clinging to a rock somewhere.
Re: (Score:2)
And one day, for bio-warfare. Much like we do with some dolphins...
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Well, penicillin is basically a kind of bread mold, so the bacterial competion it's facing isn't heavily affected by our use of it as a medicine. Less so, in fact, than the soil bacteria that make tetracycline are by our use of *its* antibiotic.
Penicillin is probably more affected by BHA and BHT and various other things that are added to bread to keep it from molding.
Re: (Score:2)
Message from the Department of Irony (Score:1)
Re:Message from the Department of Irony (Score:5, Informative)
That's basically what normal flora [colorado.edu] is.
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Pickling too. Gotta love that delicious bacterial brew that keeps us safe from botulism.
Was this publicly funded research? (Score:1)
- If so, why the fuck am I prompted to pay/log in to download the full text?
- And if so, why the fuck are these parasite website like Springer and ACS still allowed to paywall publicly funded research??
Re: (Score:2)
- If so, why the fuck am I prompted to pay/log in to download the full text?
- And if so, why the fuck are these parasite website like Springer and ACS still allowed to paywall publicly funded research??
Because you only funded the research, and they're publishing the results?
Or perhaps because they need to pay for staff, keep the website alive, and send prints to the handful of universities. You know, logistics, distribution.
Oh, and they admittedly need to make boat loads of money, too. Publishing is still a great business [falkvinge.net] to be into -- there probably wouldn't be any copyright laws without them.
Whichever it is, methinks it's less noteworthy than public research ending up as patent applications. (Especially
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The military has hospitals too ya know. Perhaps infections in patients coming from field hospitals are is big problem too?
Re:Umm, this is founded by the us military (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Umm, this is founded by the us military (Score:4, Insightful)
Thanks for listing some of those things. I hadn't heard of the of jellyfish thing - that's neat stuff. The main reason I think it's good to point out what you did is it maybe can help counter the great amount of cluelessness amongst people who don't bother to look into or think about things. We live in a mental land chock full of buzzwords and phrases - nuclear, military, intelligence, cloud, etc., and I think it helps to clarify things.
This bit with the e. coli looks interesting; one has to wonder at just how more usefully it and similar organisms and techniques might could be used.
Re:Umm, this is founded by the us military (Score:4, Interesting)
That is a great post, very informative.
For anyone that's interested, here are a few links about medical advances linked to armed conflict.
Medical legacy forged by war [smh.com.au]
Medical Advances Save Lives in Combat [army.mil]
Medical Treatment Advances Help Injured Soldiers [npr.org]
E. Coli is not always harmless (Score:2)
I Am Legend (Score:2)
This will end up well. Trust us, it will...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Am_Legend_(film) [wikipedia.org]
The MacGyver Microbe (Score:3)
Dude, E. Coli is like the Raspberry Pi of bacteria.
Any moment (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
End of the world (Score:1)
Zombie apocalypse in 3, 2, 1......