Key to New Antibiotics Could Be Deep  Within Isolated Cave
 
ScienceDaily (Apr. 11, 2012) —  Antibiotic-resistant bacteria found in one 
of the deepest, most isolated caves  in the world could mean good news in 
the battle against superbugs. Researchers  from McMaster and the University of 
Akron have discovered a remarkable  prevalence of such bacteria in New 
Mexico's Lechuguilla Cave, a place isolated  from human contact until very 
recently.

The discovery that bacteria have developed defenses against antibiotics  
could indicate the presence of previously unknown, naturally occurring  
antibiotics that doctors could use to treat infections.
 
McMaster's Gerry Wright, scientific director of the Michael G. DeGroote  
Institute for Infectious Disease Research, and Hazel Barton, associate 
professor  of biology at the University of Akron, collected strains of bacteria 
from the  cave's deepest recesses. 
None of the bacteria are capable of causing human disease, nor have they 
ever  been exposed to human sources of antibiotics but they pair found that 
almost all  were resistant to at least one antibiotic. Some were resistant to 
as many as 14  different antibiotics. 
In all, resistance was found to virtually every antibiotic that doctors  
currently use to treat patients. 
"Our study shows that antibiotic resistance is hard-wired into bacteria. It 
 could be billions of years old, but we have only been trying to understand 
it  for the last 70 years," said Wright. "This has important clinical 
implications.  It suggests that there are far more antibiotics in the 
environment 
that could be  found and used to treat currently untreatable infections." 
The researchers also identified resistance in bacteria related to the  
bacterium that causes anthrax. This resistance has yet to emerge in the  
clinic. 
"We can say to doctors, 'While this isn't a problem right now, it could be 
in  the future, so you need be aware of this pre-existing resistance and be 
prepared  if it emerges in the clinic, or you are going to have a problem,'" 
said  Barton. 
Resistance to antibiotics among bacteria is a growing concern for human  
health. With the emergence of bacteria such as multi-drug resistant  
Staphylococcus and the global spread of resistance to all clinically used 
drugs,  
where and how these organisms acquire resistance are becoming important  
questions, said Wright. 
"In extreme cases these organisms are resistant to seven or more drugs and  
are untreatable using traditional treatment, and doctors must resort to 
surgery  to remove infected tissue," said Wright. "The actual source of much of 
this  resistance is harmless bacteria that live in the environment." 
Because antibiotics are heavily prescribed and used in agriculture, it is  
difficult to find an environment where antibiotics do not exert some kind of 
 influence. That made Lechuguilla Cave the perfect environment to look at 
the  pre-existing reservoir of antibiotic resistance in nature. 
Since it was discovered in 1986, access to the cave has been limited to a 
few  expert cavers and researchers each year. It is surrounded by an 
impermeable  layer of rock, meaning it can take water up to 10,000 years to 
reach 
its deepest  recesses, an age well beyond the discovery of antibiotics. 
The research was published April 11 in the Journal PLoS ONE. 
_http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/04/120411205423.htm_ 
(http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/04/120411205423.htm)

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