Step taken in fighting staph infections

Published: May 5, 2008 at 11:08 AM

IOWA CITY, Iowa, May 5 (UPI) -- U.S. scientists say they have succeeded in killing established biofilms of Staphylococcus aureus by using one of the bacteria's own regulatory systems.

Although the discovery isn't ready for clinical application, University of Iowa researchers said their findings offer insight into a dispersal mechanism for staph biofilms and might help identify therapeutic targets.

Biofilms are communities of bacteria that grow on moist surfaces, including heart valves, bone and medical implants, the scientists said. Highly resistant to antibiotic therapy, biofilm infections represent a tough and dangerous medical problem.

"We have shown that activating the cells' communication system, also known as quorum sensing, in established biofilms causes the biofilms to disperse rapidly," said Assistant Professor Alexander Horswill. "This is the first report of an existing dispersal pathway in Staph aureus. If we can tap into this mechanism, then that might lead to better treatments."

The findings were published in the April 25 issue of the journal PL0S Pathogens.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Woods in tie for Australian Masters lead (51 min)
Bourdy alone at top at Hong Kong Open (52 min)
MLS: Los Angeles 2, Houston 0 (OT)
Your Daily Horoscope
The almanac
NBA: Denver 105, LA Lakers 79
NBA: Sacramento 109, Houston 100
fark
Cops who found magic mushroom grow house give up on counting them all, say it would be easier if...
Dramatic exposé on the "Golden Girls", how one show turned a generation of boys into homosexuals;...
Photoshop what this woman is holding
Merlot the cat, who went missing 17 months ago when he was less than a year old, has returned home...
Middle school teacher resigns job she held for 22 years, after she's caught stealing small amounts...
But honestly, who amongst us hasn't mistaken a uniformed police officer for a Sonic drive-through...