 
Helping Cystic Fibrosis Patients Beat Bugs
10 September 2003
People with weakened immune systems, including patients with
cystic fibrosis could be better protected in future from a highly
resilient bacteria, thanks to work by medical scientists from
the University of Leeds. The research is presented today, Wednesday
10 September 2003, at the Society for General Microbiology's meeting
at UMIST in Manchester.
"British soldiers stationed in South East Asia and North
Australia, as well as local people, can be exposed to infection
by a dangerous bacterium called Burkholderia pseudomallei which
causes pneumonia and septicaemia. This bacterium is resistant
to many antibiotics and, as treatment can take nine months with
frequent relapses, we urgently need to find new ways of combating
it" says Dr Zarina Yousuf from the Department of Oral Biology,
University of Leeds.
The scientists have been studying a bacterium from the same family,
called Burkholderia cepacia, which infects cystic fibrosis patients,
in the hope of finding ways of combating it. The work is urgently
needed as cystic fibrosis sufferers can easily contract highly
infectious strains of the bacteria that cause epidemics. Once
infected a patient must be isolated from their family and fellow
sufferers, drastically affecting their quality of life.
"Our research has concentrated on the cell wall which appears
to give the bacteria its unusual resistance to antibiotics, especially
a fat and sugar component called lipopolysaccharide" says
Dr Yousuf. "We hope to identify and target the key genes
responsible for modification of lipopolysaccharide, as well as
those responsible for a number of internal cell activities. We
hope that treatments which work against this bacterium will also
be successful against the related, much more dangerous varieties
such as Burkholderia pseudomallei."
The scientists are also interested in plans to release similar
strains of bacteria into the environment where they will be used
as biological cleansing or decontamination agents. "We need
to fully understand how these bacteria infect people so that we
can make sure that only organisms of no danger to humans are released
into the environment," says Dr Yousuf. "This could need
long term studies as, for instance, Burkholderia pseudomallei
can remain hidden in its latent state in infected people for up
to 26 years before they become ill".
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