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    News and Articles on Bacteriophage



    NYU scientists discover dangerous new method for bacterial toxin transfer  Jan 7, 2009
    D., and Richard Novick, M.D., suggests that Staph aureus also can take advantage of bacteriophages, viruses that infect bacteria, to pass genetic material on to completely unrelated bacteria ... The experiments were part of a general exploration of bacteriophages ... When Dr. Chen, a postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Novick's laboratory, suggested doing some transfer experiments with bacteriophages, Dr. Novick, said "go ahead, but it won't work." To his surprise, the bacterial viruses did the... (EurekAlert!)

    Why A Virus With Unusual Properties Injects Unusual Substance Into E. Coli Bacteria  Dec 18, 2008
    Such viruses are known as bacteriophages, or phages. The results also may help other researchers to come up with new ideas about ways to kill E. coli bacteria, which can be dangerous to humans. (Science Daily)

    Evolution Of Virulence Regulation In Staphylococcus Aureus  Oct 19, 2008
    22, 2007) Researchers have identified a bacteriophage active against Staphylococcus aureus, including methicillin-resistant strains, in mice and possibly humans ... 29, 2007) Antibiotic doses could be reduced by up to 50 times using a new approach based on bacteriophages ... Steven Hagens, previously at the University of Vienna, says that certain bacteriophages, a type of. (Science Daily)

    Newly Identified Enzyme Treats Deadly Bacterial Infections In Mice  Jul 8, 2008
    Now, with an uptick in antibiotic-resistant bacteria reaching alarming proportions, Rockefeller University scientists have identified an enzyme produced in viruses (called bacteriophages) that could stop these one-celled powerhouses dead in their tracks ... 1, 2007) Bacteria have two major enemies: antibiotic drugs and bacteriophage viruses, which infect and kill them ... 29, 2007) Antibiotic doses could be reduced by up to 50 times using a new approach based on bacteriophages. (Science Daily)

    More Severe Bone Infections, Health Complications In Children Linked To MRSA, Researchers Find  Jul 2, 2008
    ScienceDaily (July 1, 2008) The emergence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) as a major pathogen has led to more complications and longer hospital stays for children with acute bone infections, UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers report. Acute osteomyelitis, a bone infection that predominantly occurs in children, is usually caused by the staph bacteria. (Science Daily)

    Antibiotic Resistance Evolution  May 28, 2008
    Of course, Salmonella doesn t get a runny nose and E. coli isn t sneezing when infected by viruses known as bacteriophage. Bacteriophage: Viruses Infecting Bacteria Contribute to Antibiotic Resistance ... Bacteriophage take their toll by a reduction in reproductive fitness. (Suite101.com)

    Can This Man Beat the Flu with a Single Universal Vaccine?  May 21, 2008
    This gene codes for the coat protein of a bacteria-infecting virus, or bacteriophage. Four years later they published the bacteriophage s complete genome all four genes of it. (Scientific American)

    The Search for a Universal Flu Vaccine: A Q&A with Walter Fiers  May 21, 2008
    This was our first project: the determination of the sequence of a real gene as it occurs in nature, and this was from the genome of the bacteriophage MS2 ... We looked for the smallest possible genome: a bacteriophage with RNA. We elucidated the nucleotide sequence of a gene, and this was published in 1972 ... The bacteriophage MS2 contains four genes, and we published the complete genome in 1976. (Scientific American)

    'Alien'-type Viruses May Be Able To Treat MRSA  Apr 3, 2008
    "Some bacteria specific viruses -- called bacteriophages -- have been used in the past to help clear up infections caused by bacteria, but their use died out when antibiotics like penicillin and methicillin became widely available", says Janice Spencer from the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland ... Immobilising the bacteriophages onto sutures -- the hospital thread used to stitch up patients during operations -- immediately kills some of the bacteria that would otherwise infect the... (Science Daily)

    3D Virus Image, At Highest Resolution Ever  Mar 6, 2008
    The team obtained a three-dimensional map of the capsid, or protein shell, of the epsilon15 bacteriophage, a virus that infects bacteria and is a member of a family of viruses that are the most abundant life forms on Earth, Jiang said. Other methods of determining the structure could not be used for this family of virus. (Science Daily)

    Antibiotic-resistance work gets $30,000 prize  Feb 28, 2008
    Lu's solution uses bacteriophages, viruses that infect only bacteria ... The bacteriophages also chew through slimy layers of bacteria called biofilms that can form on surfaces of medical devices or food-processing equipment ... Bacteriophages were discovered in the early 1900s but were later eclipsed by antibiotics. (Boston Globe)

    MIT Student Honored for Antibiotics Work  Feb 28, 2008
    One of Lu's projects involves engineering viruses called bacteriophage that help destroy the mechanisms bacteria use to resist antibiotics ... Lu's method involves using bacteriophage to penetrate the protective slime layer and kill the bacteria underneath. (ABC News -- Wire)

    Scientists Create First Synthetic Bacterial Genome -- Largest Chemically Defined Structure Synthesized In The Lab  Jan 25, 2008
    Venter, Smith and Hutchison made the first significant strides in the development of a synthetic genome by their work in assembling the 5,386 base pair bacteriophage X174 (phi X). They did so using short, single strands of synthetically produced, commercially available DNA (known as oligonucleotides) and using an adaptation of polymerase chain reaction (PCR), known as polymerase cycle assembly (PCA), to build the phi X genome. (Science Daily)

    DNA-protein Complex Crucial To Spread Of Antibiotic Resistance Among Bacteria Solved  Dec 22, 2007
    21, 2007) Researchers have solved the structure of a DNA-protein complex that is crucial in the spread of antibiotic resistance among bacteria. Knowing this structure also provides fundamental insight into how cells successfully divide into two new cells with intact DNA.. (Science Daily)

    Study On Toxin That Tainted Spinach, Shiga Toxin, Reveals Treatment Possibility  Dec 12, 2007
    Bacteria that carry a virus (a bacteriophage) that packs the Shiga toxin gene (Stx) may depend on it for protection from bacterial predators like the ciliated protozoan Tetrahymena. A discovery by University at Buffalo biologists that may explain the evolution of a lethal toxin is providing new information that could lead to more effective treatments for humans who fall victim to it. (Science Daily)

    Bacteria Employ Type Of DNA Modification Never Before Seen In Nature  Dec 11, 2007
    1, 2007) Bacteria have two major enemies: antibiotic drugs and bacteriophage viruses, which infect and kill them. The two disparate threats may have something in common. (Science Daily)

    So Cal Neurogenetics Pioneer Dies  Dec 1, 2007
    A visit to Cold Spring Harbor Lab in 1948, followed by a two-year stint as a postdoctoral scholar at Caltech, introduced Benzer to the field of bacteriophage genetics, the study of viruses that infect bacteria. At Purdue, Benzer pioneered a technique of recombination in mutant bacteriophages, providing the first evidence that a single gene can be divided ... His work with bacteriophages led him to experiments with Drosophila melanogaster. (NBC4.tv, CA)

    How Drug-resistant Staph Bacteria Undermine Body's Defenses  Nov 13, 2007
    22, 2007) Researchers have identified a bacteriophage active against Staphylococcus aureus, including methicillin-resistant strains, in mice and possibly humans. S. aureus is a highly flexible and potentially. (Science Daily)

    Developing Kryptonite For Superbug  Nov 12, 2007
    11, 2007) University of Idaho researchers are crossing academic and geographical bounds to develop more effective defenses against Staphylococcus aureus bacteria and other deadly pathogens. One of the goals of that effort is to create much faster and more accurate identification of strains resistant to the antibiotic methicillin, formally known as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA.. (Science Daily)

    Bugs from River Cam may be the key to antibiotic resistance  Sep 22, 2007
    Dr David Pickard and colleagues at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute isolated the viruses, known as bacteriophages, from the river water ... A bacteriophage attaches itself to the outside of the bacterial cell, penetrates it and uses the cell to produce lots more bacteriophage particles which then burst out of the cell killing the bacteria ... The researchers isolated a type of bacteriophage which kills a bacterium that infects the stomach of mice - similar to the E coli bacteria that causes... (BBC News -- UK)

    New viruses to treat bacterial diseases -- 'My enemies' enemy is my friend'  Sep 3, 2007
    Phage based treatment has been largely ignored until recently in Western Europe and the USA. The main human clinical reports have come from Eastern Europe, particularly the Tbilisi Bacteriophage Institute in Georgia where bacteriophages are used for successful treatment of infections such as diabetic ulcers and wounds ... Bacteriophage therapy offers an alternative that needs to be taken seriously in Western Europe, says Derek Pickard. (EurekAlert!)

    Bacteria-eating Virus a Counter to Superbug  Aug 15, 2007
    Initiated in the erstwhile Soviet Union during the Second World War, the bacteriophage is used as standard treatment in parts of Eastern Europe for bacterial infections from gangrene to strep throat. Consequent on overuse, many bacteria have become bacteria- resistant. (MedIndia)

    Stalin's cure?A bacteria-eating virus used by the Red Army could tackle MRSA  Aug 14, 2007
    Red Army soldiers used bacteriophages against gangrene ... A new treatment for bacterial infections - antibiotics - was seeking to assert its supremacy over another fledgling therapy - a bacteria-devouring virus called a bacteriophage ... The initial euphoria around the bacteriophage as a means of combating what had been incurable conditions subsided and the virus was all but forgotten. (BBC News -- Health)

    Researchers discover key mechanism to emergence of deadly strep bacteria  Jul 16, 2007
    The researchers found that a specific genetic mutation in the M1T1 strep clone controls the shift to this invasive form a property which they traced to an event that occurred about 30 years ago when a virus known as a bacteriophage infected the strep bacteria and introduced a new gene ... In the case of the invasive strep clone, a bacteriophage provided the bacterium a genetic advantage that turned a relatively benign pathogen into a potential deadly disease agent ... A gene present on the... (EurekAlert!)

    Team Builds Viruses To Combat Harmful 'Biofilms'  Jul 12, 2007
    Lu and senior author James Collins, professor of biomedical engineering at BU, aim to eradicate these biofilms using bacteriophage, tiny viruses that attack bacteria. Phage have long been used in Eastern Europe and Russia to treat infection. (Science Daily)

    FDA Extends GRAS Approval LISTEX(TM) to all Food Products  Jul 3, 2007
    WAGENINGEN, The Netherlands, July 3 /CNW/ - The FDA and USDA Announced Today They Have Approved LISTEX(TM) P100, the Natural Bacteriophage Product Against Listeria, as GRAS (Generally Recognised as Safe), for all Food Products In the fight against Listeria, one of the most dangerous food pathogens, US food processing companies can now apply a novel yet natural tool: LISTEX(TM) bacteriophages ... Bacteriophages ('phage') are the most abundant micro-organisms on earth ... The LISTEX(TM)... (Canada Newswire)

    Fighting Drug-Resistant Bugs  Jun 9, 2007
    Vincent Fischetti at Rockefeller University is enlisting the help of bacteriophages, viruses that infect only bacterial cells, leaving human ones alone ... USING A VIRUS TO ATTACK BACTERIA 1 A bacteriophage is a virus that infects bacteria but not human cells. (Time.com)

    Studying anthrax in a Soviet-era lab - with Western financing  May 28, 2007
    But scientists have another interest at Eliava as well: its work on bacteriophages, naturally occurring viruses that can be cultivated to target and kill specific strains of infectious bacteria. The institute has one of the largest collections of bacteriophage samples in the world, and its scientists are considered among the best ... "Eliava is a brand name in bacteriophages," said the institute's director, Revaz Adamia, who was Georgia's ambassador to the United Nations until taking on his... (International Herald Tribune -- Health)

    Leading The Fight Against Food Poisoning  May 25, 2007
    The researchers intend to develop bacteriophage-based treatments for the control of Campylobacter. Bacteriophages the term literally means 'bacterium-eater' are naturally occurring agents that target and destroy bacteria with a high degree of efficiency, and do so selectively and specifically, without affecting beneficial bacteria or gut cells ... Both GangaGen and The University of Nottingham are leaders in bacteriophage research and view the technology as a vital breakthrough in the control of... (Science Daily)

    Viral Enzyme Clears Ear Infection In Mice  Mar 24, 2007
    The enzyme is derived from a bacteriophage, a virus whose target is bacteria, rather than animal cells, Dr. McCullers and colleagues reported in the open-access journal PLoS Pathogens. While the heptavalent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine appears to be lowering the incidence of acute otitis media in the U.S., the disease remains the "leading reason for physician visits and antibiotic prescriptions among preschool-aged children," Dr. McCullers and colleagues said. (MedPage Today)

    New Approach Could Lower Antibiotic Requirements By 50 Times  Jan 30, 2007
    Antibiotic doses could be reduced by up to 50 times using a new approach based on bacteriophages. Steven Hagens, previously at the University of Vienna, told Chemistry & Industry, the magazine of the SCI, that certain bacteriophages, a type of virus that infects bacteria, can boost the effectiveness of antibiotics gentamicin, gramacidin or tetracycline ... Experiments in mice revealed that 75% of those infected with a lethal dose of Pseudomonas survived if the antibiotic gentamicin was... (Science Daily)



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