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    Home > Active Ingredient News > Immunology News > Nat Commun: Genome Research Helps Fight Bacterial Infections

    Nat Commun: Genome Research Helps Fight Bacterial Infections

    • Last Update: 2020-05-16
    • Source: Internet
    • Author: User
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    2020 March 20 News / BioValley BIOON / --- addicted to wheat strain of Bacillus long-term existence and nature, long time, we have always thought that the bacteria is not a threat to human health, but now gradually it is found to be one of the most worrisome source of pathogens hospital, because it often causes infection and is resistant to many antibioticsrisk of this type of infection, especially for immunocompromised patients or patients with underlying inflammatory lung diseases (e.g., cystic fibrosis)Given the importance of this pathogen and the increasing infection often cause serious clinical consequences, the urgent need for their pathogenicity and resistance to drug development knowledge related infectionsa (Source: Www.pixabay.com)In a recent study, scientists initially established a genetic typing method, the method can be standardized tropic strain of Bacillus different wheat genomes analysisscientists found, Smaltophilia swollen complex may be divided into 23 kinds of different lineages prevalenceOne particular lineage broke out around the world, and is the highest incidence of human-related strainanalysis also identified several cases of potential outbreaks strains closely related genes, these same strains isolated in a hospital a few days or weeks"binding studies of other pathogens, our results indicate that Streptococcus and other pathogens in the hospital environment monitoring system based on how genomes can help detect transmission and improve infection control," said the senior author of the study ThomasKohl(Biovalley Bioon.com)Information Source:Genome-basedmonitoringofmulti-resistantpathogencanhelpimproveinfectioncontrolOriginal source:Gröschel, MIThephylogeneticlandscapeandnosocomialspreadofthemultidrug-resistantopportunistStenotrophomonasmaltophilia <br />NatureCommunicationsdoi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15123-0
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