A
team at Griffith's Institute for Glycomics identified a unique sensory
structure that is able to bind host-specific sugar and is present on
particularly virulent strains of Campylobacter jejuni.
Source:Griffith
University
In their paper
A direct-sensing galactose chemoreceptor recently evolved in invasive strains
of Campylobacter jejuni published in Nature Communications this
week, the team explain that the ability to cause disease depends on the ability
of bacterial cells to move towards their target host cells. This movement is
determined by specialised structures on the bacterial cells called sensory
receptors that sense chemicals in their environment. It is the first known
finding of a bacterial sensor that can bind sugar directly.
Campylobacter bacteria are now well recognised as one of the most
common cause of food borne enteritis and have surpassed other food bugs such as
Salmonella and Shigella as causes of illness, hospitalisation and
of lost production in the workplace. The campylobacter infection is
usually passed to humans from food animals, particularly poultry, through
consumption of undercooked meats, unpasteurised milk and contaminated water. The
researchers used chicken models to look at the mutant displays with disabled
CcrG sensor and determined that disabling just this one sensor reduces the
ability of campylobacteria to colonise chickens.
"This is a
very important finding as sensory structures are very specific to each bacteria
and offer high target specificity for design of new antimicrobial
compounds," says research leader Professor Victoria Korolik. "Essentially
it should be possible to design an antimicrobial drug to target a specific
pathogen that will not affect normal flora." "Targeting sensory
apparatus of microbes also reduces risk of development of antimicrobial
resistance, since the bacterial cell will not be killed, but rather, have its
ability to reach host cells and cause disease, disabled." "In
addition, getting an understanding of how bacterial sensors bind to chemicals
has enormous potential for the future. With understanding will come the ability
to engineer bacteria with a set of sensors that will selectively direct
cancer-killing bacteria toward cancer cells or direct bacteria that degrade chemicals
in environmental contamination, such as oil spills to the contaminated
areas."
By
V. V. SATHIBABU
UDDANDRAO
JRF & Ph. D
Research Scholar
Department of
Biochemistry
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