Old antibiotic found effective against TB

Dunya News

Lab tests raise hopes that a soil bacterium found 60 years ago could kill the tuberculosis germ.

A European journal reported on Monday this on Monday.Pyridomycin, a natural antibiotic exuded by the bacterium Streptomyces pyridomyceticus, shows promise as a candidate to fight a drug-resistant strain of TB, researchers in Switzerland said.According to the UNs World Health Organisation (WHO) at least half a million of the eight to nine million people who each year develop TB have a strain that is resistant to frontline drugs.Pyridomcycin works by inhibiting a single gene called InHA which, in mutant strains, helps the TB microbe thwart isoniazid drugs.Germs that were exposed to pyridomycin became depleted in fatty acids, which were essential to building the bacterial cell wall.Natures antibiotic, pyridomycin, is a very selective killer of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the bacterium responsible for tuberculosis in humans, said Stewart Cole, a professor at the Federal Polytechnic School of Lausance (EPFL) in Swizerland.It is also active against mycobacteria that have developed resistance to front-line drug treatments such as isoniazid.The research appears in EMBO Molecular Medicine, published by the European Molecular Biology Organisation (EMBO).Japanense scientists in 1953 were the first to see pyridomycin as a potential agent against TB bacteria.There was a bout of interest in 1986, but further development has been limited because how it worked was unclear.