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04.06.2009 14:25

Discovery of new proteins may lead to more effective treatment of

Hanna Holm, Malmö University Informationsavdelningen / Communications Department
Schwedischer Forschungsrat - The Swedish Research Council

    A research team at the Faculty of Odontology at Malmö University in Sweden has
    discovered two new proteins that are of importance to the survival of
    bacteria and their colonization of the human body. Besides enhancing
    our knowledge of the ability of bacteria to spread, the findings may also
    lead to more effective treatment of endocarditis and infections
    associated with implants.

    Each year some 500 people in Sweden develop endocarditis, inflammation
    of the heart valves. The condition can be life-threatening, and one of
    the bacteria that cause the disease is Streptococcus gordonii, a
    bacterium that exists in the mouth.

    "It's part of the natural flora of bacteria there, but sometimes it
    gets into the bloodstream, and then it can lead to infective
    endocarditis. The bacteria have also been found in infections
    surrounding various kinds of implants," says Associate Professor Julia
    Davies, who directed the research team at the Faculty of Odontology.

    To survive in the oral cavity the bacteria must be able to attach to a
    surface, such as the mucous membrane. This is done with the help of
    proteins. In the mid 1990s one of these proteins from the bacterium S.
    gordonii was identified by a research team in England.

    Julia Davies and her colleagues have now discovered two more. These
    scientists have thereby taken a step toward an understanding of how
    these bacteria get a grip on a surface, on heart valves, for instance.
    The two new proteins, SGO 0707 and SGO 1487, are found in the cell
    wall of the bacterium S. gordonii. The proteins are produced by the
    bacterium, and without them the bacterium cannot fasten to a surface,
    which is a precondition for it to be able to survive.

    If bacteria wind up in the bloodstream, they can bind to the heart
    valves, where they produce a so-called biofilm and encapsulate
    themselves. Once the bacteria are encapsulated, it is extremely
    difficult to get rid of them. But with enhanced knowledge of how
    bacteria fasten to surfaces, it will be easier to find effective new
    strategies to treat biofilms-induced diseases.

    "If we can block this binding with the help of drugs, treatment will
    be more effective," says Julia Davies.

    It was previously known that bacteria that grow in so-called biofilms
    alter their properties when they settle on a surface. For example,
    they become more resistant to antibiotics and antibacterial compounds.
    These researchers are now moving on to find out how this resistance arises.

    "We want to understand in what ways bacteria alter their properties
    when they settle on a surface," says Julia Davies.

    For more information, please contact Associate Professor Julia Davies
    at phone: +46 (0)40-665 84 92 or via e-mail julia.davies@mah.se
    <mailto:julia.davies@mah.se


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