ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Health

Gonorrhea-curing vaccine on its way!

Washington DC, [USA] July 07 (ANI): The day is not far when people suffering from Gonorrhea will have vaccines to treat them.

ANI Jul 07, 2018 05:36 IST googleads

Gonorrhea cells

Washington DC, [USA] July 07 (ANI): The day is not far when people suffering from Gonorrhea will have vaccines to treat them.
Gonorrhoea, a sexually transmitted disease that results in 78 million new cases worldwide each year, is highly damaging if untreated or improperly treated.
It can lead to endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, ectopic pregnancy, epididymitis, and infertility. Babies born to infected mothers are at increased risk of blindness.
Researchers have identified a protein that powers the virulence of the bacteria that causes gonorrhoea, opening the possibility of a new target for antibiotics and, even better, a vaccine.
The microbe, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, is considered a "superbug" because of its resistance to all classes of antibiotics available for treating infections.
"The infections very often are silent," said a researcher Aleksandra Sikora.
"Up to 50 percent of infected women don't have symptoms, but those asymptomatic cases can still lead to some very severe consequences for the patient's reproductive health, miscarriage or premature delivery," he added.
A better antibiotic therapy and a vaccine are needed since N. gonorrhoea strains are resistant to most new treatments.
The body relies on enzymes known as lysozymes that, as their name suggests, thwart bacteria by causing their cell wall to lyse, or break apart.
Lysozymes are abundant both in epithelial cells, which make up the tissue on the outside of organs and the inside of body cavities and in the phagocytic cells that protect the body by ingesting foreign particles and bacteria.
In turn, many gram-negative bacteria - characterized by their cell envelope that includes a protective outer membrane - have developed ways of defeating lysozymes.
Now that new targets have been identified, they can be explored as bullseye candidates for new antibiotics or a vaccine - if the lysozyme inhibitor can itself be inhibited, then the bacteria's infection-causing ability is greatly reduced.
Sikora and her collaborators named the new protein SliC, short for surface-exposed lysozyme inhibitor of c-type lysozyme.
Studying SliC's function in culture as well as in a gonorrhoea mouse model - mice were infected with N. gonorrhoea, then checked for SliC expression at one, three and five days - researchers determined the protein was essential to bacterial colonization because of its anti-lysozyme role.
"This is the first time an animal model has been used to demonstrate a lysozyme inhibitor's role in gonorrhoea infection," Sikora said.
Sikora also stressed the importance of lysozyme inhibitor.
The study appears in PLOS Pathogens journal. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Health

Development of  multi-stage Malaria vaccine ‘AdFalciVax’ is under

Development of  multi-stage Malaria vaccine ‘AdFalciVax’ is under

The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), through its Regional Medical Research Centre, Bhubaneswar (RMRCBB) and National Institute of Malaria Research (NIMR), in partnership with the Department of Biotechnology-National Institute of Immunology (DBT-NII), is currently developing a novel recombinant chimeric malaria vaccine candidate, named AdFalciVax.

Read More
Health

New mRNA vaccine is more effective, less costly to develop

New mRNA vaccine is more effective, less costly to develop

A new type of mRNA vaccine is more scalable and adaptable to continuously evolving viruses such as SARS-CoV-2 and H5N1, according to a study by researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health and the Pennsylvania State University.

Read More
Health

Millions of new solar system objects to be found: Study

Millions of new solar system objects to be found: Study

A group of astronomers from across the globe, including a team from the University of Washington and led by Queen's University Belfast, have revealed new research showing that millions of new solar system objects will be detected by a brand-new facility, which is expected to come online later this year.

Read More
Health

AI creates proteins with high binding strengths

AI creates proteins with high binding strengths

Scientists at the Institute for Protein Design at the University of Washington School of Medicine employed software to design protein molecules with unusually high affinity and specificity to a number of complex indicators, including human hormones. Notably, the scientists obtained the strongest ever documented contact strength between a computer-generated biomolecule and its target.

Read More
Health

Radiation treatment could be used to treat heart failure: Study

Radiation treatment could be used to treat heart failure: Study

Cardiologists and radiation oncologists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis pioneered the use of radiation therapy, a cancer-fighting technique, to treat patients with ventricular tachycardia, a potentially fatal abnormal heartbeat.

Read More
Health

Positive messages can reduce negative effects of fitness posts

Positive messages can reduce negative effects of fitness posts

A few words of body appreciation, according to a Washington State University study, can help offset the negative impact of viewing objectified pictures of female fitness influencers.

Read More
Health

Electric hair styling appliances can cause burns: Study

Electric hair styling appliances can cause burns: Study

Electronic hair styling products, such as curling irons, are a common cause of burn injuries in the US homes, particularly among young children, according to research presented at the 2023 AAP National Conference & Exhibition at the Walter E Washington Convention Centre.

Read More
Health

Single vaccine protects against three lethal coronavirus types

Single vaccine protects against three lethal coronavirus types

A vaccine created by researchers at the Duke Human Vaccine Institute that protects against three separate lethal coronaviruses has shown success in mouse trials, suggesting the potential of a pan-coronavirus vaccination.

Read More
Health

Does Covid-19 make migraines worse?

Does Covid-19 make migraines worse?

According to a study published in the European Journal of Neurology, Covid-19 and its immunisation have negligible effect on migraine severity. Among 550 adults who had received migraine-related care at a Spanish headache clinic, 44.9 per cent (247) reported COVID-19 at least once and 83.3 per cent(458) had been vaccinated; 61 patients (24.7 per cent ) reported migraine worsening since COVID-19 and 52 (11.4 per cent) since vaccination.

Read More
Health

Anti-leishmaniasis drugs change host cells at molecular level: St

Anti-leishmaniasis drugs change host cells at molecular level: St

Researchers have proven the efficacy of vaccines they created to prevent the disfiguring skin illness leishmaniasis in animal experiments, and the most promising candidate is currently undergoing preparation for a Phase 1 human trial.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.