All posts tagged: resistant

Venom and Hot Peppers Offer a Key to Killing Resistant Bacteria

Venom and Hot Peppers Offer a Key to Killing Resistant Bacteria

Researchers from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) have identified new ways to combat tuberculosis and reduce bacterial resistance, developing three new antibiotics derived from scorpion venom and habanero peppers. A team led by Lourival Domingos Possani Postay, from the Institute of Biotechnology’s Morelos campus, created two drugs that demonstrated efficacy against the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis, responsible for tuberculosis, as well as against Staphylococcus aureus, a microorganism that in hospital environments can cause various clinical complications, from skin infections to potentially fatal diseases such as pneumonia, meningitis, septicemia, and endocarditis. The antibiotics were derived from the venom of the scorpion Diplocentrus melici, native to the state of Veracruz. The team was able to isolate two colorless molecules called benzoquinones—heterocyclic compounds that do not contain amino acids—from the arachnid’s toxin. These molecules have a particular property: When they come into contact with air, they oxidize and change color. One becomes blue and the other red. This behavior allowed scientists to determine their chemical structure, synthesize them in the laboratory, and evaluate their biological properties. The …

Pill for Cushing’s syndrome could benefit patients with treatment resistant ovarian cancer, study suggests | UK News

Pill for Cushing’s syndrome could benefit patients with treatment resistant ovarian cancer, study suggests | UK News

A drug taken to treat a rare condition could also extend the life of some ovarian cancer patients, a trial has suggested. Published in The Lancet medical journal and presented at the SGO 2026 annual meeting on women’s cancer, the study says relacorilant, a pill currently used to treat Cushing’s syndrome, could benefit patients with platinum-resistant ovarian cancer. On average, patients with this treatment-resistant cancer only live for around one year to 18 months after diagnosis. Women are deemed to have it if their disease progresses within six months of having platinum-based chemotherapy – a standard treatment. You need javascript enabled to view this content Enable javascript to share Share From March: Will prostate cancer screening be rolled out? Researchers studied data from 381 platinum-resistant ovarian cancer patients and found those taking relacorilant were 35% less likely to die compared to those receiving usual care. The study suggested that patients taking the pill lived for an average of 16 months, compared to 11.9 months for those who had usual care. Authors said: “These outcomes – …

5,000-year-old ice bacterium found resistant to 10 modern antibiotics

5,000-year-old ice bacterium found resistant to 10 modern antibiotics

A collection of microbial specimens gathered from a cave located in Romania has displayed a variety of similarities to bacteria that are currently being studied in neurobiology. This research indicates that these microbes have developed a degree of resistance to numerous antibiotics that are currently found in use by health care providers in today’s clinics. At the same time, this isolate, Psychrobacter SC65A-3, is capable of producing substances that can either kill or restrict the growth of some well-known pathogenic microbes. The combination of these traits has created a level of excitement and concern about this strain of bacteria. The Psychrobacter SC65A-3 strain was first discovered in a layer of ice found within the Scărișoara Ice Cave, which is believed to have formed approximately 5,000 years ago. This location is among the largest accumulations of underground ice in the world, as confirmed by Dr. Cristina Purcarea and her colleagues, who authored a paper regarding this discovery that was published in the journal Frontiers in Microbiology. The team drilled a 25-meter ice core from the area …

Genetic trick to make mosquitoes malaria resistant passes key test

Genetic trick to make mosquitoes malaria resistant passes key test

Scientists tested the approach on Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes, which are endemic to Tanzania, where they transmit malaria James Gathany/CDC via AP/Alamy A genetic technology known as a gene drive could help prevent malaria by spreading genes in wild mosquitoes that stop them transmitting the parasite. Tests in a lab in Tanzania have now confirmed that one potential gene drive should achieve this if it were released in the country. “It would be a game-changing technology, that’s for sure,” says George Christophides at Imperial College London. A specific piece of DNA in the genome of an animal is normally passed on to only half its offspring, because a parent’s DNA is divided in half among egg or sperm. Gene drives increase this proportion, meaning a bit of DNA can spread rapidly through a population even if it provides no evolutionary benefit. There are many natural gene drives that work via all kinds of mechanisms – perhaps even in some human populations – and in 2013, biologists developed artificial gene drives using CRISPR gene-editing technology, which works by …