 
Separating the Bugs from the Germs
10 September 2003
Spotting disease causing germs has just become a lot easier with
a new technique developed by researchers from Newcastle upon Tyne,
scientists learned today, Wednesday 10 September 2003, at the
Society for General Microbiology's meeting at UMIST in Manchester.
"Knowing exactly which bacteria and micro-organisms are
around at any given time is vital if you want to be able to kill
the dangerous ones," says Dr Olivier Sparagano, from the
School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development at the University
of Newcastle. "Any method of diagnosis has got to be able
to detect several different species of minute organisms simultaneously,
and warn when unexpected ones show up. We have developed a new
molecular method of screening bacteria and other disease causing
organisms."
Some types of germs rely on luck, and cannot invade their hosts
- which can be people or animals - unless other micro-organisms
have already attacked the host's defences first. But many different
types of disease causing bacteria and other bugs can be around
at the same time, so detection methods need to be able to spot
them simultaneously. In addition, the commonest disease bearing
arthropods such as ticks and mosquitoes can carry and transmit
more than one infection at the same time. All these complex factors
make choosing exactly the right combination of protection and
control, such as vaccination or antibiotics, very difficult.
By concentrating on known differences in the genes and DNA sequences
of infectious micro-organisms, the team from Newcastle, and their
colleagues in Spain, Italy and Turkey, were able to build up a
screening system, which can spot even previously unknown dangerous
germs at an early stage of infection. This knowledge will in turn
allow other scientists to target the genes needed for the disease
causing bugs to survive, and block their action, preventing the
organisms from spreading.
The development of this technique allows much more accuracy and
sensitivity compared with previous methods of disease detection.
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