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Researchers create molecule to tackle antimicrobial resistance

Irish researchers create molecule to tackle antimicrobial resistance
Researchers have created a new molecule to fight drug-resistant bacteria. Credit: Ella Maru Studios

Researchers at Maynooth University, working as part of an international team, have created a new molecule that could help in the fight against drug-resistant bacteria.

Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) occurs when , viruses, fungi, and parasites change over time and no longer respond to medicines, making infections harder to treat and increasing the risk of disease, severe illness, and death. The development of new ways to kill bacteria is an urgent scientific need, as most will no longer be effective in 2050 due to the rising levels of AMR.

The research harnessed the principles of supramolecular chemistry, a niche scientific area that explores interactions between molecules, to achieve the breakthrough. Most importantly, the study uncovered molecules that are efficient at killing bacteria but whose toxicity to healthy human cells is very low.

The new research is described in Chem, to coincide with World AMR Awareness Week which runs from 18–24 November. This global campaign, run by the World Health Organization, aims to raise awareness and understanding of AMR in the hope of reducing the emergence and spread of drug-resistant infections.

More than 1.2 million people, and potentially millions more, died in 2019 as a direct result of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections, according to the most comprehensive estimate to date of the global impact of AMR. This research may pave the way for new approaches to tackle this problem that kills more people annually than HIV/AIDS or malaria.

Lead researcher Luke Brennan of Maynooth University's Department of Chemistry said, "We are discovering new molecules and looking at how they bind to anions, which are negatively charged chemicals that are extremely important in the context of the biochemistry of life. We are laying the fundamental foundations that could prove useful in combating various diseases from cancer to cystic fibrosis."

The work is based on the use of synthetic ion transporters and is the first time that researchers have demonstrated that an influx of salt (sodium and ) into the bacteria can cause a series of biochemical events that lead to bacterial cell death—even in strains that are resistant to currently available antibiotics such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).

Study co-author Dr. Robert Elmes of Maynooth University's Kathleen Lonsdale Institute for Human Health Research says, "This work shows how using our approach, a sort of '' that causes an influx of salt into cells, we can effectively kill resistant bacteria in a way that counteracts known methods of bacterial resistance."

Bacteria work hard to maintain a stable concentration of ions inside their cell membranes, and when this delicate balance is disrupted, it wreaks havoc on normal cell function, and the cells cannot survive.

Elmes says, "These synthetic molecules bind to chloride ions and wrap it up in a 'fatty blanket' that allows it to easily dissolve in the bacteria's membranes, bringing the ions along for the ride and disrupting the normal ionic balance. The work is a great example of foundation knowledge in chemistry fundamentals impacting on unmet needs in human health research."

Prof Kevin Kavanagh, a microbiologist in Maynooth University's Department of Biology, says, "The rising incidence of infections by is a major concern. This work is an example of chemists and biologists working together to pioneer the development of new antimicrobial agents with significant future potential."

Such results pave the way for the potential development of anion transporters as a viable alternative to currently available antibiotics, something urgently required as the problem of AMR continues to rise.

More information: Luke E. Brennan et al, Potent antimicrobial effect induced by disruption of chloride homeostasis, Chem (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.chempr.2023.07.014

Journal information: Chem

Citation: Researchers create molecule to tackle antimicrobial resistance (2023, November 21) retrieved 27 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2023-11-molecule-tackle-antimicrobial-resistance.html
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