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Bacteria
Exchange DNA To Develop Resistance To Drugs
When some
disease-causing bacteria encounter a new obstacle, they simply swap DNA
with their relatives to acquire the genes needed to overcome it. And
they do so quite readily, according to scientists from the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).
The research reveals how
Staphylococcus aureus, the common "staph" bacterium
responsible for several human infections, has repeatedly adapted to
novel environments and conditions.
The research offers new approaches
to antibiotic and vaccine design, and answers long-standing questions
about the origins of both diseases: toxic shock syndrome (TSS) and
antibiotic-resistant infections.
"We have long wondered how TSS
and methicillin-resistant staph strains took hold in the
population," says study director James Musser, M.D., Ph.D., a
bacteria researcher from NIAID's Rocky Mountain Laboratories in
Hamilton, Mont. "The debate among microbiologists has been, did
isolated strains pick up new genes once and then spread through the
population, or did the bacteria acquire the genes on multiple
occasions? Our research clearly shows the second explanation is
correct."
The discovery likely settles the
debate, Dr. Musser explains, and raises a concern about how easily
bacteria can become dangerous. S. aureus is a common microbe that often
causes no illness. Some strains can cause diseases, however, including
TSS, food poisoning and impetigo.
The bacteria can infect the skin,
blood, urinary tract and wounds, and are a common source of infections
acquired in hospitals. Most people are unknowing S. aureus carriers,
intermittently harboring the bacteria on their skin or in their nose
and throat, even in the absence of illness.
Whether or not a particular S.
aureus strain causes disease depends largely on its genes. Different
strains can survive different environments, and Dr. Musser's team
sought to learn how genes have been exchanged between strains.
In the study reported in today's
online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, first author Ross Fitzgerald, Ph.D., and colleagues from
Dr. Musser's lab compared the genes of 36 different S. aureus strains
to determine which genes help each strain survive.
Dr. Musser's team used a technique
called DNA microarray analysis to rapidly screen their samples. Upon
analyzing the results, the researchers discovered nearly a fourth of
the genome was dispensable, consisting of genes that were not required
for the bacteria's basic life processes.
These so-called contigency genes
provide flexibility in the bacterium's ability to cause disease in
humans, cows and other organisms, explains Dr. Musser.
The TSS outbreak among menstruating
women in the late 1970's likely occurred because of a change in the
host environment brought on by new, hyperabsorbable tampons.
Similarly, methicillin resistance
emerged only after S. aureus was repeatedly exposed to the antibiotic.
Dr. Musser's research suggests the
bacteria adapted to the changes by picking up contingency genes on
multiple occasions, showing how easily new bacterial strains can appear
and spread through the population.
The discovery opens new avenues for
research in pathogenic bacteria.
"We are now looking to see if
particular strains are adept at transferring or picking up genes so
that we can know which strains we should be hypervigilant about,"
says Dr. Musser. His laboratory is also comparing different strains to
select proteins they have in common for additional research. "DNA
microarrays provide a finer microscope for dissecting bacterial
genetics, and permit a rational strategy for vaccine and drug
design."
NIAID is a component of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH). NIAID supports basic and applied research
to prevent, diagnose, and treat infectious and immune-mediated
illnesses, including HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases,
tuberculosis, malaria, autoimmune disorders, asthma and allergies. - By
Sam Perdue
(Reference: Fitzgerald JR et al. Evolutionary genomics of
Staphylococcus aureus: insights into the origin of
methicillin-resistant strains and the toxic shock syndrome epidemic.)
(Editor's Note: This article is
available online at this
URL. The article is not yet available in print.)
Related website:
NIAID
[Contact: Sam Perdue ]
10-Jul-2001
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