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Bacterial ‘hairs’ may offer new ways to fight antibiotic resistance

New understanding about how bacteria assemble their hair-like appendages could lead to ways to get around antibiotic resistance.

A better understanding of the mechanisms of pili, the hair-like surface appendages on bacteria that kickstart infection, could hold a key to developing new and more effective therapeutics, according to a new study.

Antibiotic resistance is an urgent problem globally when treating infections, and scientists continue to search for new ways to combat it. The new research could be another step in that direction.

The image on the right is a standard electron microscopy view of E. coli. On the left is an image of a pilus structure using cryo-electron microscopy and atomic modeling. The red circle and lines indicate this image corresponds to an actual pilus fiber just emerging across the bacterial outer membrane to the cell surface. (Credit: David Thanassi/Stony Brook)

David Thanassi, chair of the molecular genetics and microbiology department at Stony Brook University, and colleagues used an advanced imaging technique called cryo-electron microscopy to examine pili that uropathogenic strains of Escherichia coli assembled. E. coli is the major causative agent of urinary tract infections. The imaging captured a previously unrecognized stage in the pilus assembly process.

“This discovery provides us with new insights into the mechanism by which bacteria build these essential virulence structures leading to infection,” says Thanassi, who emphasizes that antibiotic resistance rates have risen to alarming levels, jeopardizing the effective treatment of even common infections such as of the urinary tract.

“Our findings open the door to new therapies targeting bacterial pili, and related virulence factors, as an alternative to traditional antibiotics,” he explains.

The findings are published in Nature.

A grant from the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of General Medical Sciences supported the research.

Source: Stony Brook University

The post Bacterial ‘hairs’ may offer new ways to fight antibiotic resistance appeared first on Futurity.

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