Live Breaking News & Updates on Dorota Klepacki

Stay updated with breaking news from Dorota klepacki. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Fruit Fly Compound Could Lead to New Antibiotics

A new study reports on peptide’s antibacterial mechanism. Researchers from the University of Illinois Chicago have discovered that a peptide derived from fruit flies may pave the way for the development of novel antibiotics. Published in Nature Chemical Biology, their study reveals that the natu ....

United States , Alexanders Mankin , Alexandra Brakel , Alexander Mankin , Ralf Hoffmann , Andor Krizsan , Irueosa Ohanmu , Weiping Huang , Yurys Polikanov , Chetana Baliga , Dorota Klepacki , Kyle Mangano , National Institutes Of Health , University Of Illinois Chicago , Biomolecular Sciences , College Of Pharmacy , Antibiotic Bacteria Target Illustration , Illinois Chicago , Nature Chemical Biology , Distinguished Professor , Nature Chemical , National Institutes ,

A compound from fruit flies could lead to new antibiotics

A compound from fruit flies could lead to new antibiotics
sciencedaily.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sciencedaily.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Irueosa Ohanmu , Chetana Baliga , Alexander Mankin , Alexandra Brakel , Weiping Huang , Kyle Mangano , Andor Krizsan , Ralf Hoffmann , Yury Polikanov , Dorota Klepacki , Biomolecular Sciences , College Of Pharmacy , National Institutes Of Health , Leipzig University , Nature Chemical Biology , Distinguished Professor , National Institutes ,

Can antibiotics treat human diseases in addition to bacterial infections?


 E-Mail
IMAGE: An antibiotic (green), bound in the human-like yeast ribosome (gray), allows for synthesis of some proteins (represented in orange, purple, and blue) but not others (dark green).
view more 
Credit: Maxim Svetlov/UIC
According to researchers at the University of Illinois Chicago, the antibiotics used to treat common bacterial infections, like pneumonia and sinusitis, may also be used to treat human diseases, like cancer. Theoretically, at least.
As outlined in a new
Nature Communications study, the UIC College of Pharmacy team has shown in laboratory experiments that eukaryotic ribosomes can be modified to respond to antibiotics in the same way that prokaryotic ribosomes do. ....

United States , Alexander Mankin , Daniel Wilson , Norbert Polacek , Maxim Svetlov , Timm Koller , Vaishnavi Shankar , Sezen Meydan , Dorota Klepacki , Nicholas Guydosh , Nature Communications , University Of Illinois Chicago , National Institutes Of Health , University Of Hamburg , German Research Foundation , University Of Bern , College Of Pharmacy , Swiss National Science Foundation , Illinois Chicago , Alexander Neyfakh Professor , Medicinal Chemistry , National Institutes , Pharmaceutical Sciences , Pharmaceutical Combinatorial Chemistry , Medicine Health , Disease In The Developing World ,