New Drug Promises to Help Curb Tuberculosis
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Over the past four decades, the tuberculosis bacteria has evolved to be resistant to many, if not most, of the drugs used to curb the disease. So, to fight it, University of Lausanne researcher Stewart Cole says he and his team needed to come up with a new strategy to kill the TB-causing bacteria.
"We have demonstrated that there is an important enzyme which is required to build the cell wall of Mycobacterium tuberculosis," Cole says. "And our compound blocks this enzyme from acting."
When this enzyme is blocked, the cell wall gets assembled incorrectly, and the bacteria burst open, dying in the process. Cole says no other drug has exploited this enzyme in the cell wall of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
One advantage of this strategy is that there's no similar enzyme in the walls of human cells. So there's little chance that the drug will make people sick.
Source : www.voanews.com
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