Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Medicine Biotech United Kingdom

Bacteria Discovered In Irish Soil Kills Four Drug-Resistant Superbugs (msn.com) 88

NBC News reports on how microbiologist Gerry Quinn "followed up on some folklore his family had passed on to him." Old timers insisted that the dirt in the vicinity of a nearly 1,500-year-old church in County Fermanagh in Northern Ireland, an area once occupied by the Druids, had almost miraculous curative powers.... "Here in the western fringes of Ireland there is still a tradition of having this folk cure," Quinn told NBC News. "We can look at it and see maybe it's just superstition -- or we can actually investigate and ask, 'is there anything in the soil that produces antibiotics...?'"

Once Quinn and his team decided to focus on the Irish soil, they narrowed their search to a specific type of bacteria, called Streptomyces, because other strains of this bacteria have led to the development of 75 percent of existing antibiotics, Quinn said. The bacteria was discovered by a team based at Swansea University Medical School, made up of researchers from Wales, Brazil, Iraq and Northern Ireland. The researchers first tried the newly discovered strain of Streptomyces on some garden variety bacteria. In their petri dish experiment, "it knocked them out," Quinn said. "Then we thought we'd take it one step further and find some multi-resistant organisms."

The bacteria in the experiment killed four out of the top six organisms that are resistant to antibiotics, including MRSA. "It's quite surprising," said Quinn... "The lesson is, some of the cures are right underneath your feet."

Vaughn Cooper, an evolutionary geneticist/microbiologist at the University of Pittsburgh's School of Medicine, tells NBC that more research is needed before this yields a super-antibiotic -- but "it's a cool discovery."

The World Health Organization has named antibiotic resistance as one of 2019's ten top public health threats.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Bacteria Discovered In Irish Soil Kills Four Drug-Resistant Superbugs

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 17, 2019 @08:38PM (#58290268)

    Drunken Irish bacteria are good fighters

  • Happy St Patties Day (Score:4, Interesting)

    by wolfheart111 ( 2496796 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @08:43PM (#58290284)
    A gift from the Irish. WE need all the good news we can get today... CC
    • There's also this other headline, which for some reason has had less coverage:

      Material Discovered In Chernobyl Soil Kills Four Drug-Resistant Superbugs

      Can't imagine why this is less newsworthy...

      • Is it... radioactive material?

        So it kills 4 drug-resistant superbugs. And pretty much every other cellular life too.

        This is not great news...

        Now I'll go and read the article... oooh, there is no linked article! Why is that, I wonder?...

        Searching for "Material Discovered In Chernobyl Soil Kills Four Drug-Resistant Superbugs" finds... with Google, just this article.

        Hmmm.

    • What's bothering you, Brexit or the Rugby?

      • by Anonymous Coward

        It'd be the rugby. It's the English who voted for the collapse of the Good Friday Accords when they voted for Brexit.

        • Well .... they actually voted for Vera Lynn doing a spit roast with Richard Todd & John Mills on the white cliffs of Dover plus 20 squagillion in tax cuts for Rees-Mogg & his chums. I mean for the NHS. Oh, and to be allowed to keep the Queen on stamps.

          The GFA was just collateral damage.

      • You watch the video? dont...
  • I can see where this is going.

    The profit-driven pharmaceutical industry is going to capture this bacteria, culture it, and formulate some new medication that will "save thousands of lives."

    Everyone happy, right?

    Maybe. That's not the end. Right now that magical cure is "right underneath your feet" (TFA). What they will ignore are those bacteria are part of a complex ecosystem where the parts are interconnected and dependent on each other. But they can't package and make a profit on an ecosystem

    • Re:Here we go (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @09:04PM (#58290338)

      You read it here first, folks.

      What you said was so generic, I doubt even a single person read it here first.

      You didn't name the name of the thing, so it doesn't even have that much difference compared to the standard rant.

      • Was he trolling? It's hard to tell. Pretty weak either way.

    • Completely accurate. Want an example: anti-bacterial hand soap/dish soap. Advertising is awash (pun intended) with "Kills 99.99% of Germs!". Meanwhile current bacteria populations are becoming immune to the agents used in these products. It's called evolutionary adaptation and it works no matter what anyone thinks about evolution or god.

      Meanwhile, if someone can make money on new antibiotics now the future can just go fuck itself. Use it up and breed (pun intended) future trouble because PROFIT!

      • Now you know why Irish Spring soap is so strong! Never leave home without it! Eat two bars before entering a hospital just to be safe! Always wash your hands with hand sanitizer.
        • Now you know why Irish Spring soap is so strong! Never leave home without it! Eat two bars before entering a hospital just to be safe! Always wash your hands with hand sanitizer.

          I get my bacteria resistance by eating Lucky Charms cereal. That crap tastes like medicine anyhow.

      • Completely accurate. Want an example: anti-bacterial hand soap/dish soap. Advertising is awash (pun intended) with "Kills 99.99% of Germs!". Meanwhile current bacteria populations are becoming immune to the agents used in these products. It's called evolutionary adaptation and it works no matter what anyone thinks about evolution or god.

        Meanwhile, if someone can make money on new antibiotics now the future can just go fuck itself. Use it up and breed (pun intended) future trouble because PROFIT!

        You know, I've been hearing about the resistant-microbe-pocolypse on /. for what, 20 years now?

        Nobody doubts the existence of resistance, but the apocalypse part is taking a little longer than anticipated.

        • 1. Go to a hospital (not that I'm wishing you ill health, this is just an example).

          2. Stay long enough to learn the names of about ten nurses and janitors in addition to several doctors.

          3. Develop an antibiotic resistant infection.

          Voila! The apocalypse has arrived for you. Get well soon.

    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      by DethLok ( 2932569 )

      Yeah...

      Just like bacteria that were found to be penicillin resistant decades BEFORE we started using penicillin...

      like this article says:

      https://www.theatlantic.com/sc... [theatlantic.com]

      Penicillin is use by bacteria to defend themselves. Of course there are other bacteria that are resistant to it! That's how bactiera A can eat bactiera B! Bacteria A are resistant to the effects of bacteria B's defenses, penicillin.

      We "discovered" it thousands of years after bacteria had. So obviously there are many bacteria out there in th

      • Re:Here we go (Score:4, Informative)

        by jbengt ( 874751 ) on Monday March 18, 2019 @08:21AM (#58291796)

        Penicillin is use by bacteria to defend themselves. Of course there are other bacteria that are resistant to it! That's how bactiera A can eat bactiera B! Bacteria A are resistant to the effects of bacteria B's defenses, penicillin.

        Your main point might be correct, but this is not. Penicillin was derived from mold, not from bacteria. RTFA that you linked.

  • "The use of cattle and cover crops in agriculture operations provide the link to completing the nutrient cycle in the soil."https://t.co/8XwmQjt0c9 [t.co]

    — Savory Institute (@SavoryInstitute) February 21, 2019 [twitter.com]

  • by Anonymous Coward

    'But do not despise the lore that has come down from distant years; for oft it may chance that old wives keep in memory word of things that once were needful for the wise to know.'
    -- Lord of the Rings

  • How long until there is resistant to the new super antibiotic?
    • But I have a runny nose and need a prescription for the strongest antibiotic there is, NOW!
  • this is over used and MRSA et al become resistant to it?
  • by cdsparrow ( 658739 ) on Monday March 18, 2019 @12:12AM (#58290846)

    So, the macho 'rub some dirt on it' thing actually works if you have special dirt... #themoreyouknow

    • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

      Rather than turning this into a drug they should stick with this method of application. That will curb usage a bit.

  • If one bit of woo is true, then two bits of woo are true. If two bits of woo are true, all woo is true.

    You can bet pounds to pigshit that some people are going to interpret this as proof that crystals, homeopathy and pyramids work.

    • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

      Nonesense. This is nothing but evidence that the druids worked with aliens who engineered this bacteria for them.

      • I don't know about that. But I'm willing to concede that there's precious little evidence to the contrary.

  • They need to run a proper trial, and then another one.

    Why? To be sure, to be sure!

  • I can't remember where or when I first heard this - it was a long time ago - but it's a toss up between congenital laziness and 'belief' in the 'wisdom of wives' that accounts for my casual attitude towards cleaning / a little bit of dirt.

    "A child that hasn't eaten their weight in dirt by the time they're two won't make it past five"

    • It is pretty far fetched to assume that playing in the dirt is beneficial because of its anti-bacterial properties. For each bacterium that the dirt kills, it brings hundreds of other ones.

      • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

        "It is pretty far fetched to assume that playing in the dirt is beneficial because of its anti-bacterial properties."

        And yet this site would have never been discovered if playing in dirt didn't turn out to be beneficial for the locals who were aware of it over the course of thousands of years. Or are you suggesting playing in the dirt was not beneficial and this superbug killer bacteria that was found when looking for the explanation of the benefit is just a coincidence?

        • Or are you suggesting playing in the dirt was not beneficial and this superbug killer bacteria that was found when looking for the explanation of the benefit is just a coincidence?

          It would only be a coincidence if the dirt from the next town did not have similar properties. However, it is quite common for soil bacteria to make anti bacterial toxins. Most of our antibiotics are based on them. The problem is not so much finding them, but rather finding the ones that we can safely ingest or apply to open wounds, while still maintaining their effectiveness.

          According to folk tradition, people would not "play in the dirt", rather they would wrap it in cloth, and place it under their pillow

          • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

            "It would only be a coincidence if the dirt from the next town did not have similar properties."

            I'd contend it would still be a coincidence even if the bacteria exists throughout a fair bit of the region. There are no passed down tales of healing with the dirt where I live and I'd venture this particular variety of highly effective bacteria isn't here either.

            "However, it is quite common for soil bacteria to make anti bacterial toxins." It is not however common for those toxins to more effective than known a

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      That's not due to the antimicrobial properties of dirt. It's due to the microbes in the dirt. Many studies, some very large, have shown that exposure to a greater variety of microbes as a child is associated with a better immune system: both better at fighting infection and less likely to engage in autoimmune reactions.

      The trick is to get that exposure without catching something that will actually kill you. Dirt is pretty decent for that.

      • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

        The trick is to get that exposure without catching something that will actually kill you. Dirt is pretty decent for that.

        As long as you don't get soil-borne anthrax.

  • One of the common practice in Hinduism is the thirtha yatra[*] , meaning (thirth = water, yatra = journey sanskrit) water pilgrimage. Visit so many holy temples and take a ceremonial drink of a few drops from that temple pond.

    Thinking about it, this would be like deliberately exposing oneself to various pathogens, fungi, bacteria, virii that are endemic to different parts of the country. And this is a sort of primitive immunization protocol, isn't it. If it so happens some temple pond is always infested w

  • Seriously, though--good on the researchers if they've found yet another antibiotic, but...
    Everyone here knows this just buys us a (little) time and doesn't address the fundamental issue, right?

    • Everyone here knows this just buys us a (little) time and doesn't address the fundamental issue, right

      There is no fundamental issue to be solved, there is only buying more time.

  • Bacteria Discovered In Irish Soil Kills Four Drug-Resistant Superbugs

    Although missing from the summary, it also kills potatoes.

Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!

Working...