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Viral enzyme detects, kills bacterium. (Anthrax Stopper).


Last fall, envelopes full of anthrax-causing spores killed 5 people, sickened about a dozen, and struck fear in millions. Researchers funded by the U.S. military have now developed an innovative way to detect and kill Bacillus anthracis Bacillus anthracis Infectious disease A gram-positive organism which causes often fatal infections when its endospores–resistant to heat, drying, UV light, gamma radiation, and many disinfectants–enter the body and cause septicemia Military medicine , the bacterium that causes anthrax anthrax (ăn`thrăks), acute infectious disease of animals that can be secondarily transmitted to humans. It is caused by a bacterium (Bacillus anthracis . Seeking help from nature, the researchers are using an enzyme produced by a bacteriophage, a virus that preys upon bacteria.

The enzyme, called lysin Lysin

A term used to describe substances that will disrupt a cell, with the release of some of its constituents. Unless the damage is minor, this action leads to the death of the cell.
, prevented the death of most mice that the researchers had infected with a bacterial relative of B. anthracis, Raymond Schuch of Rockefeller University Rockefeller University, philanthropic organization in New York City, founded 1901 as the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research by John D. Rockefeller for furthering medical science and its allied subjects and to make knowledge of these subjects available to the  in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 and his colleagues there report in the Aug. 22 Nature. The investigators also used the enzyme to create a prototype handheld instrument that quickly detects the anthrax bacterium, even in its spore form.

"This is a very clever exploitation" of lysin, says biowarfare researcher Stephen Morse of Columbia University.

Bacteriophages, or phages, infect bacteria in order to reproduce inside. Once they do, phages use lysin to break apart their host's cell walls so the new phages can infect other bacteria. "They cause the [bacterium] to explode" says study coauthor Vincent A. Fischetti.

Discovered nearly a century ago, bacteriophages have long attracted the interest of physicians seeking to control bacterial infections. Antibiotics stole the spotlight from phage therapy for many decades, but there's renewed interest in the strategy, given the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria (SN: 6/1/96, p. 350; 6/3/00, p. 358).

Over the past few years, Fischetti and his colleagues have exploited the bacteria-killing talent of phages in a different way. They've shown that lysin itself represents a new way to destroy bacteria. For example, they've successfully used lysin to treat animals infected with bacteria that cause strep throat Strep Throat Definition

Streptococcal sore throat, or strep throat as it is more commonly called, is an infection of the mucous membranes lining the pharynx. Sometimes the tonsils are also infected (tonsillitis).
 and pneumonia in people (SN: 6/10/00, p. 376).

Fischetti's group recently turned its attention to potential biowaffare agents, starting with the anthrax bacterium. While conventional antibiotics can treat many strains of B. anthracis, there's concern that resistant strains could evolve or be created, says Fischetti.

He and his colleagues began working with a phage phage: see bacteriophage.

phage - A program that modifies other programs or databases in unauthorised ways; especially one that propagates a virus or Trojan horse. See also worm, mockingbird. The analogy, of course, is with phage viruses in biology.
 that infects the anthrax bacterium almost exclusively and identified the gene encoding its lysin. In test-tube experiments, the enzyme destroyed strains of B. anthracis collected from around the world but left most other bacteria unscathed.

Next, the scientists tested the enzyme on mice infected with a strain of Bacillus cereus Bacillus ce·re·us
n.
A species of Bacillus that causes an emetic type and a diarrheal type of food poisoning in humans.
 closely related to the anthrax bacterium. This strain serves as an initial testing ground for anthrax therapies because B. anthracis is so dangerous to work with. The B. cereus cereus: see cactus.
cereus

Any of various large cacti (genus Cereus and related genera) of the western U.S. and tropical New World, including the saguaro and the organ-pipe cactus (Lemairocereus thurberi, also L. marginatus or C. thurberi).
 strain typically kills infected mice, but treatment with lysin saved up to 76 percent of infected animals, Fischetti's team reports.

The researchers now plan to test the enzyme against B. anthracis, first in rodents and then in a nonhuman primate nonhuman primate

see primate.
. If those experiments prove successful, physicians would then assess the safety of the viral protein in human volunteers. If lysin passes muster, the U.S. and other governments could then consider stockpiling the enzyme for any future anthrax attack.

Fischetti's group also built a B. anthracis detector. The investigators mixed lysin with chemicals that emit a flash of light when exposed to a substance released by dead bacteria. They also added an agent that induces B. anthracis spores to germinate, making them susceptible to lysin. Finally, they engineered a handheld light meter to monitor this broth and found it could detect a signal produced by as few as 100 spores within an hour of adding them to the broth.

"It's an innovative and promising strategy," says Morse.
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Author:Travis, J.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 24, 2002
Words:587
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