Novel non-antibiotic agents against MRSA and common strep infections

Public release date: 12-Sep-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Jessica Studeny jessica.studeny@case.edu 216-368-4692 Case Western Reserve University

Menachem Shoham, PhD, associate professor of biochemistry at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, has discovered novel antivirulence drugs that, without killing the bacteria, render Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) and Streptococcus pyogenes, commonly referred to as strep, harmless by preventing the production of toxins that cause disease. The promising discovery was presented this week at the Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy in San Francisco.

MRSA infections are a growing public health concern, causing 20,000 to 40,000 deaths per year in the United States alone. It is the most prevalent bacterial pathogen in hospital settings and in the community at large, with about one million documented infections per year nationally, costing an estimated $8 billion annually to treat.

The problem has become increasingly severe as the bacteria have developed a resistance to antibiotics. As result, health care providers are running out of options to treat patients suffering from antibiotic-resistant infections, like MRSA and strep, creating a dire need for alternative treatments and approaches.

"Staph bacteria are ubiquitous and normally do not cause infections, however, occasionally these bacteria become harmful due to their secretion of toxins," says Dr. Shoham. "We have discovered potential antivirulence drugs that block the production of toxins, thus rendering the bacteria harmless. Contrary to antibiotics, these new antivirulence drugs do not kill the bacteria. Since the survival of the bacteria is not threatened by this approach, the development of resistance, like that to antibiotics, is not anticipated to be a serious problem."

Dr. Shoham identified a bacterial protein, known as AgrA, as the key molecule responsible for turning on the release of toxins. AgrA, however, needs to be activated to induce toxin production. His goal was to block the activation of AgrA with a drug, thus preventing the cascade of toxin release into the blood that can lead to serious infections throughout the body.

The screening for AgrA inhibitors was initially carried out in a computer by docking libraries of many thousands of "drug-like" compounds and finding out which compounds would fit best into the activation site on AgrA. Subsequently, about 100 of the best scoring compounds were tested in the laboratory for inhibition of the production of a toxin that ruptures red blood cells. Seven of these compounds were found to be active. Testing compounds bearing chemical similarity to the original compounds lead to the discovery of additional and more potent so-called "lead" compounds.

Optimization of the initial "lead" compounds was performed by chemical synthesis of 250 new compounds bearing small but important chemical modifications on one of the initial leads. More than a dozen active compounds have been discovered by this method. The best drug candidate reduces red blood cell rupture by 95 percent without affecting bacterial growth.

Beginning this fall, Dr. Shoham and colleagues will begin testing the drug candidate in animal models.

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Novel non-antibiotic agents against MRSA and common strep infections

BYU breakthrough targets birth defects – BYU biochemistry professor Emily Bates has made recent discoveries that may …

BYU biochemistry professor Emily Bates has made recent discoveries that may revolutionize medicine

BYU research has shed light on the cause and prevention of birth defects as well as cancer.

BYU biochemistry professor Emily Bates and a few of her students recently preformed and published research that may lead to a permanent answer for birth defects and impact how cancer is treated.

Fetal Alcohol Syndrome anda rare condition called Andersen-Tawil Syndrome both cause birth defects like cleft palates, small or missing teeth andmisshapedor connected fingers and toes. Andersen-Tawil Syndrome is caused by genetic changes in a potassium channel, which is also the same channel blocked by consumption of alcohol.

Bates and her students made the revolutionary discovery that potassium channels help cells receive instructions that tell them what they are and where they should be.

Dr. Bates in the research lab

The instructions for cells to divide and move need to be sent during pregnancy while a baby is developing, but those signals should turn off after the baby is born so the cells stay where they are. In cancer cells, the signal has turned back on, allowing cells to metastasize or invade other tissues and allow for growth of new tumors.

Not only are Bates and her students excited to have found some information about the causes of Andersen-Tawil and Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, they are also excited to test a possible therapy to stop the spread of cancer cells throughout the body.

What happens later on in life if someone gets cancer, is that this pathway turns on when its not supposed to turn on anymore, Bates said. The cancer cells start to metastasize, or invade another tissue causing more tumors. What we hope is that blocking this channel will block a signaling pathway that drives metastasis.

In other words, if Bates and her students can eventually find a way to block the channel after it opens back up, cancer cells will not spread throughout the body once the original tumor is removed.

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Space shuttle Endeavour stops in El Paso next week

Space shuttle Endeavour will make a refueling stop in El Paso next week on its way to its final destination in California. (Times file photo)

The space shuttle Endeavour, riding on a carrier aircraft, will make a refueling stop in El Paso before flying low over the White Sands area and Las Cruces next week during the historic final shuttle ferry flight across the country, NASA officials said.

The shuttle's flight on Sept. 19 over the El Paso-Las Cruces region is part of the farewell ferry flight for the space shuttle program.

Endeavour will ride piggyback on a modified 747 flying over NASA facilities on a

The El Paso region has a long history with the space shuttle program, including the landing of the space shuttle Columbia on the Alkali Flats at White Sands Space Harbor in 1982.

Over the decades, thousands of El Pasoans got to view space shuttles making travel stops at Biggs Army Airfield.

"I'm kind of sad to see the fleet being retired," said Richard Lopez, a former NASA electrical engineer who sits on the board of Insights El Paso Science Center.

Lopez plans to try to get a glimpse of the shuttle when it flies over El Paso in what he described as a bitter-sweet end

The space shuttles "sure were workhorses," said Lopez, who worked for NASA for 25 years in Houston and White Sands. "They provided a lot of flights with a lot of good work from the crews. Now, we will rely on rockets going up with the Russians."

The shuttle's final cross-country flight will begin at sunrise Monday when the shuttle departs from the Kennedy Space Center.

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Space shuttle Endeavour stops in El Paso next week

Japanese cargo ship leaves space station

Astronauts on the International Space Station bade farewell to a Japanese cargo ship Wednesday, ending Japan's latest delivery flight to the orbiting lab.

Japan's unmanned H-2 Transfer Vehicle 3 (HTV-3) left the space station at 11:50 a.m. EDT after station astronauts used a robotic arm to detach the spacecraft from its docking port and set it free. The orbiting lab's robotic arm released the cargo ship, which is now filled with trash and unneeded items, as both spacecraft were sailing 235 miles (378 kilometers) above Canada, NASA officials said.

The HTV-3 spacecraft is expected to be intentionally destroyed early Friday, when it fires its rocket engines for the last time to leave orbit and burn up in Earth's atmosphere somewhere over the Pacific Ocean. That de-orbit maneuver is scheduled for about 12:50 a.m. EDT on Friday, NASA officials said.

Japan's HTV cargo ships are cylindrical vessels capable of hauling tons of supplies and new equipment for astronauts living on the International Space Station. The spacecraft were developed by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and are also called Kounotori, which is Japanese for "White Stork."

Japan launched HTV-3 to the space station on July 20, and the cargo ship arrived at the orbiting laboratory a week later. NASA astronaut Joe Acaba and Japanese astronaut Akihiko Hoshide used the station's robotic arm to capture the craft and attach it to an available docking port. The same two astronauts performed the detach-and-release procedure for HTV-3 Wednesday. [ Launch Photos for Japan's HTV-3 Spaceship ]

The HTV-3 spacecraft delivered nearly 8,000 pounds (3,600 kilograms) of cargo to the space station, including care packages of food, clothes and other gear for the outpost's six-person crew. The cargo ship also delivered an aquatic habitat that will eventually house fish for a future science experiment, two student experiments for a YouTube Space Lab contest, and external experiments that were moved to a porch-like platform on the station's Japanese Kibo laboratory module.

Japan's HTV spaceships are part of an international fleet of unmanned spacecraft used to send regular cargo deliveries to the space station. The fleet includes Russia's Progress spacecraft, Europe's Automated Transfer Vehicles and the private Dragon space capsules built by the private U.S. spaceflight company SpaceX.

SpaceX's first Dragon spacecraft flew a test flight to the space station in May, with the first operational delivery flight scheduled to launch in October. Another American company, the Virginia-based Orbital Sciences Corp., is building an unmanned space cargo ship for NASA called Cygnus. The spacecraft's Antares rocket is expected to make its first test flight later this year.

SpaceX and Orbital Sciences each have contracts with NASA to provide regular cargo delivery flights to the space station.

You can follow Space.com Managing Editor Tariq Malik on Twitter @tariqjmalik and Space.com on Twitter @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook and Google+.

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Japanese cargo ship leaves space station

NASA's Huge New Rocket May Cost $500 Million Per Launch

The giant rocket NASA is building to carry astronauts to Mars and other destinations in deep space may cost $500 million per launch when it's flying regularly, space agency officials said Tuesday (Sept. 11).

NASA is eyeing $500 million as a target right now for the Space Launch System (SLS) when it begins making roughly one flight per year, which could begin happening after 2023. But things could change as the SLS program which was just announced in September 2011 matures, officials said.

"We've estimated somewhere around the $500 million number is what an average cost per flight is," SLS deputy project manager Jody Singer, of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., said Tuesday during a presentation at the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics SPACE 2012 conference in Pasadena, Calif.

"But again, I'd caution you, because we still are working on our contracts and where we're going," Singer added. "Plus we're in the development phase, and you really have to have a little bit more of a steady-state flight launch to be able to get the more efficient launch rate. But that's the number we're using right now." [Photos: NASA's Space Launch System]

NASA's next big rocket

NASA unveiled the SLS just two months after the last flight of its venerable space shuttle program, which was grounded in July 2011 after 30 years of orbital service.

But the giant rocket and the capsule it will loft known as the Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle are not a replacement for the space shuttle. That space-taxi role will be filled by private American spaceships, which NASA is grooming to be ready to carry astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit by 2017.

The SLS-Orion combo, on the other hand, is a deep space transportation system. In 2010, President Barack Obama charged NASA with getting astronauts to a near-Earth asteroid by 2025 and then on to the vicinity of Mars by the mid-2030s, and SLS-Orion is how NASA will try to make that happen.

The first test flight of the SLS is slated for 2017, and NASA hopes the rocket will begin lofting astronauts in 2021.

If the SLS is able to meet the $500 million target, it would end up being cheaper to fly than the space shuttle. The shuttle program cost about $209 billion (in 2010 dollars) over its lifetime and made a total of 135 flights, yielding an average cost per launch of more than $1.5 billion.

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NASA's Huge New Rocket May Cost $500 Million Per Launch

50 Years Later: NASA Discusses Using Innovation and Ingenuity to do Big Things – Video

12-09-2012 15:03 Fifty years ago, President John Kennedy challenged us to go to the moon within the decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard. As we remember Neil Armstrong this week -- the man who, with a single step realized the hopes of a president, this nation and the world -- we are recognizing the extraordinary achievements of the past five decades achieved by our nation's space agency and where the passion to explore will lead us in the future. President Barack Obama has set NASA on course toward an asteroid and to send humans to Mars within the next two decades. This goal is not without notable challenges, but using the knowledge, expertise and American ingenuity that has been the trademark of NASA scientists and engineers for the last half-century, NASA continues to make possible that which is seemingly impossible. At 3:00 pm EDT on Wednesday, September 12, NASA astronauts, scientists and engineers held a Google+ Hangout to talk about NASA's rich history of innovation and ingenuity and talk about NASA's future goals for scientific discovery and human spaceflight. During the event, we'll be joined by: - Dan Dumbacher, Deputy Associate Administrator for Exploration Systems Development in NASA's Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate. He is the former Director of Engineering at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. Previously, he was the deputy director of safety and mission assurance at Marshall. - Ron Garan, astronaut who ...

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50 Years Later: NASA Discusses Using Innovation and Ingenuity to do Big Things - Video

NASA drone spies on tropical storm Nadine

Overnight, tropical depression 14 (TD14) gained enough intensity to earn the name Nadine, the 14th tropical storm of the 2012 Atlantic hurricane season. Our tropical weather expert, Brian McNoldy says he could only find two others years in 160 years of records in which the 14th storm formed sooner: 1936 and 2011.

Nadine is on a projected path that threatens no land area according to the National Hurricane Center, but a NASA field campaign is taking full advantage of this storm to get deeper insight into how hurricanes develop and intensify.

Flight path of NASA unmanned aircraft and its position over then tropical depression 14 (now Nadine) as of 5:30 p.m. EDT Tuesday. Its altitude at the time was 60,300 feet. (NASA)

Related: From tropical disturbance to hurricane: To be or not to be?

On Tuesday, NASA sent an unmanned Global Hawk into TD14/Nadine on a 26 hour mission to sample the storms environment. It is the longest continuous period a storm has ever been investigated, considerably longer than the capabilities of manned Air Force Hurricane Hunter planes. Climate Centrals Andrew Freedman put it this way: To put that [26 hour flight] in further perspective, the longest regularly scheduled passenger flight is between Singapore and Newark, N.J., which clocks in at a comparatively paltry 18 hours and 55 minutes.

One of two Global Hawks NASA is using to investigate tropical weather systems (NASA) The drone that gazed down on Nadine is one of two Global Hawks NASA will dispatch from Wallops Island, Va. to collect data on tropical systems through early October and again in 2013 and 2014.

The planes are operated from ground control stations at Wallops and Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. The mission is formally known as the Hurricane and Severe Storm Sentinel (HS3).

NASA video overview of HS3

Reaching altitudes as high as 60,000 feet, the Hawks can fly above the highest-penetrating storms, while its suite of cutting-edge instruments can sense the air all the way down to the ocean surface.

Link: An interactive view of the Hawk aircraft

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NASA drone spies on tropical storm Nadine

Operation Medicine Drop at the Dublin Peanut Festival Saturday

ELIZABETHTOWN - Operation Medicine Drop is coming to the Dublin Peanut Festival on Saturday.

The Bladen County Sheriff's and Health departments will be set up to accept any out-of-date or unused prescription or over-the-counter drugs, said Capt. Rodney Hester.

It's a chance for residents to safely dispose of the drugs, Hester said.

Unintentional poisoning from prescription medication is on the rise in North Carolina, Hester said.

Nearly 4,500 people in North Carolina have died from overdoses of prescription drugs since 1999, he said.

Flushing unused medication only works to contaminate streams and rivers, harming wildlife, according to information provided by agencies including Safe Kids North Carolina that sponsor the initiative.

Residents can bring prescription drugs to the Operation Medicine Drop tent at the festival between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., Hester said.

The 20th annual Peanut Festival will kick off at 10 a.m. with a parade and offer day-long events including a car show.

- Nancy McCleary

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Operation Medicine Drop at the Dublin Peanut Festival Saturday

U.S. Preventive Medicine Mission of Better Health through Preventive Care Is Reflected in New Institute of Medicine …

U.S. Preventive Medicine Mission of Better Health through Preventive Care Is Reflected in New Institute of Medicine ReportJacksonville, FL (PRWEB) September 12, 2012 The recently released Institute of Medicine (IOM) Report, "Best Care at Lower Cost: The Path to Continuously Learning Health Care in America," highlights the possible health care savings through primary, secondary and tertiary ...

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U.S. Preventive Medicine Mission of Better Health through Preventive Care Is Reflected in New Institute of Medicine ...

Noble Appointed Chair of Cedars-Sinai Department of Medicine

Newswise LOS ANGELES Sept. 11, 2012 Paul W. Noble, MD, an international leader in pulmonary medicine, has been named chair of the Department of Medicine at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

Noble comes to Cedars-Sinai from Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C., where he has been professor and chief of the Division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine since 2006.

"We are pleased to welcome an outstanding clinician, scientist and educator of Dr. Noble's caliber to Cedars-Sinai," said Shlomo Melmed, MD, senior vice president for Academic Affairs and dean of the medical faculty at Cedars-Sinai. "His commitment to scholarly research resulting in improved treatments for patients is an excellent fit for our medical center's mission. Our strong Department of Medicine has long been a source of pride for Cedars-Sinai, and we are confident that the leadership reins are being placed into very capable hands."

Noble's clinical expertise and research focuses on unraveling mechanisms underlying chronic lung inflammation and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, and developing novel treatments for these disorders. His research is heavily supported by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute at the National Institutes of Health.

Noble succeeds Glenn Braunstein, MD, who is stepping down after 26 years as chair of the Department of Medicine to a new role as Vice President for Clinical Innovation, leading an institution-wide initiative at Cedars-Sinai to implement best practices for integrated, accountable, coordinated care. Under Braunsteins astute leadership, the Department of Medicine consistently has been recognized as a national leader in patient care, research discovery and education and has attracted prominent researchers and physicians from around the nation and the world to Cedars-Sinai.

Noble is a prolific author, with his original research appearing in the highest quality peer-reviewed publications, including the New England Journal of Medicine, Science and Nature Medicine. A deputy editor of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Noble has been a leading contributor to discovery in lung disease.

Noble, 54, who earned his bachelors degree at Haverford College and his medical degree from New York University School of Medicine, completed his residency and chief residency in Internal Medicine at UC San Francisco and pulmonary and critical care fellowships at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and the National Jewish Center for Immunology and Respiratory Medicine.

As an assistant professor of medicine at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, he was founder and director of the Interstitial Lung Disease Clinic, before moving on to becoming professor of medicine and associate chief of pulmonary and critical care at Yale University School of Medicine, where he also formed an Interstitial Lung Disease Clinic. At Duke, he propelled his Division to the highest ranks in the nation for clinical care, research productivity and NIH funding.

An elected member of the American Society of Clinical Investigation and the American Association of Physicians, he has been a member of the editorial boards for the American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology and the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. He also is a member of the scientific advisory board of the American Asthma Foundation.

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Noble Appointed Chair of Cedars-Sinai Department of Medicine

iTriage Adds Harvard Medical School as a Content Review Partner

Relationship expands trust in one of the leading consumer health care appsDenver, CO (PRWEB) September 12, 2012 iTriage® today announced that Harvard Medical School has completed an extensive review of its medical content and has extended its stamp of approval. iTriage’s core medical content – which includes information on conditions, medications and medical procedures – was developed by a team ...

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iTriage Adds Harvard Medical School as a Content Review Partner

Libertarian Gary Johnson an ideal candidate

For most of us, this is either the first or second time we are voting for the president of the United States. While it is ultimately your choice who to vote for, there is one candidate who is being overlooked: the Libertarian candidate, Gary Johnson.

I am in no way insinuating that you need to vote for Johnson. Its your decision. I am, however, encouraging you to know about all the candidates running for the highest office of the United States. I am writing about Johnson because he is the only third-party candidate who will appear on the ballot in all 50 states this November.

Johnson was the governor of New Mexico from 1995-2003 and was known as Governor Veto. While in office he vetoed more than 750 proposed bills and cut taxes 14 times. He never raised taxes once. In 2003, New Mexico and three other states had a balanced budget.

Johnson strongly supports both the Constitution and civil liberties. Where does he stand on the issues? He would eliminate the IRS, audit the Federal Reserve, end the war in Afghanistan, reform health care, allow gays to marry, and legalize and regulate marijuana.

There are several issues that voters frequently ask about, but I will touch on a few that have been getting a lot of attention this election season.

First is Johnsons plan to fix the spending deficit. In an interview with Rebecca Costa on The Costa Report, Johnson said, I promise to submit a balanced budget for 2013 and veto any expenses that exceed revenue. Believing with those two promises kept, spending will be lower than any other scenario you could possibly come up with.

What would he do to health care? Johnson says he would repeal the Affordable Care Act. He believes that with fewer government mandates and regulation, health care will be competitive and more affordable for Americans.

Johnsons stance on civil liberties is as follows: Government must be neutral on personal beliefs, Johnson said. He would allow anyone to marry whomever he or she chooses. The government must not impose their values upon marriage.

Johnson encourages everyone to visit the website iSideWith.com. He is certain that many people are more of a libertarian than they might think. In my opinion, this is a great resource to learn about all the candidates in the election.

Johnson also disapproves of critics who say that voting for a third party is a wasted vote. What is more than a wasted vote, when you vote for someone you dont agree with? Youre a making a judgment that you are voting for the lesser of two evils. How about you vote for someone you believe in?

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Libertarian Gary Johnson an ideal candidate

Libertarian Gary Johnson is ideal candidate

For most of us, this is either the first or second time we are voting for the president of the United States. While it is ultimately your choice who to vote for, there is one candidate who is being overlooked: the Libertarian candidate, Gary Johnson.

I am in no way insinuating that you need to vote for Johnson. Its your decision. I am, however, encouraging you to know about all the candidates running for the highest office of the United States. I am writing about Johnson because he is the only third-party candidate who will appear on the ballot in all 50 states this November.

Johnson was the governor of New Mexico from 1995-2003 and was known as Governor Veto. While in office he vetoed more than 750 proposed bills and cut taxes 14 times. He never raised taxes once. In 2003, New Mexico and three other states had a balanced budget.

Johnson strongly supports both the Constitution and civil liberties. Where does he stand on the issues? He would eliminate the IRS, audit the Federal Reserve, end the war in Afghanistan, reform health care, allow gays to marry, and legalize and regulate marijuana.

There are several issues that voters frequently ask about, but I will touch on a few that have been getting a lot of attention this election season.

First is Johnsons plan to fix the spending deficit. In an interview with Rebecca Costa on The Costa Report, Johnson said, I promise to submit a balanced budget for 2013 and veto any expenses that exceed revenue. Believing with those two promises kept, spending will be lower than any other scenario you could possibly come up with.

What would he do to health care? Johnson says he would repeal the Affordable Care Act. He believes that with fewer government mandates and regulation, health care will be competitive and more affordable for Americans.

Johnsons stance on civil liberties is as follows: Government must be neutral on personal beliefs, Johnson said. He would allow anyone to marry whomever he or she chooses. The government must not impose their values upon marriage.

Johnson encourages everyone to visit the website iSideWith.com. He is certain that many people are more of a libertarian than they might think. In my opinion, this is a great resource to learn about all the candidates in the election.

Johnson also disapproves of critics who say that voting for a third party is a wasted vote. What is more than a wasted vote, when you vote for someone you dont agree with? Youre a making a judgment that you are voting for the lesser of two evils. How about you vote for someone you believe in?

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Libertarian Gary Johnson is ideal candidate