Searching for drugs in new places

I mentioned that it's microbiology week at fellow Scienceblog Deep Sea News. Today's post over there is on "bioprospecting" in the sea--looking for naturally-produced chemicals that we can harness for employment as drugs or other uses. For example:

Over the last 20 years at Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution we have developed a culture collection containing 17,000 bacteria and fungi from deep-water marine invertebrates and sediments. We have shown that the collection contains many unusual microbes which are not known from the terrestrial environment and are fermenting the isolates to produce extracts for screening as antibacterial or anticancer agents.

Click the link for more...

More like this

The Johnson-Sea-Link manned submersible (Photo courtesy of Chip Baumberger) Nature provides a treasure-trove of chemicals that can be used in chemical manufacturing processes, or developed into drugs for the treatment of human disease. Since the discovery of penicillin in 1929 and its impact on…
This is the second in a series of five referenced articles about shared characteristics between deep and shallow water corals Special guest post by Christina A. Kellogg Just as humans have beneficial bacteria living on our skin and in our intestines, corals have symbiotic microbes in their mucus,…
Like most fields, microbiology is one filled with jargon. Many laymen don't even realize the differences between a bacterium and a virus, much less the smaller differences between, for example, a pathogenic versus a commensal organism. So, while I haven't decided yet exactly what I might write…
Microbial ecology, and its relation to the development of infectious disease, is an ever-growing field of study. Of course, there are a vast number of bacterial species living amongst us, most of which do not cause us any harm. Others may infect us only when, so to speak, the stars align in a…

Funny, just ten minutes before reading this I was listening to a senior person in the Life Sciences division at work making just the same point - using marine extracts to expand combinatorial libraries.

By Sock Puppet of… (not verified) on 12 Sep 2007 #permalink