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How hospital bug can evade attack

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How hospital bug can evade attack

Scientists have decoded the genetic make-up of a bacterium responsible for

many hospital-acquired infections - and shown why it is so difficult to

tackle.

Clostridium difficile caused more than 44,000 infections in the UK in 2004 -

mostly among the elderly.

Researchers found it can chop and change its genetic structure very easily -

maximising its ability to neutralise attack by antibiotics.

The Sanger Institute study is published in Nature Genetics.

Its overall variation is remarkable

Professor n Wren

The researchers hope their work will aid the search for new treatments,

vaccines, and diagnostic tests.

The emergence of bacteria resistant to many of the leading antibiotics is a

major problem facing healthcare providers worldwide.

C. difficile is a particular problem, because it can only be treated with

two antibiotics, metronidazole and vancomycin - and there is concern that

these will also soon become ineffective.

Bigger threat than MRSA

The bug is now more prevalent, and causes more deaths than the notorious

superbug MRSA.

It causes a range of diseases from antibiotic-associated diarrhoea to a

life-threatening colon disease, called pseudomembranous colitis.

The Sanger team found that half of the genes in C. difficile are absent from

four of its bacterial cousins, including species that cause botulism and

tetanus.

The researchers also found great genetic variation even between different

strains of the bug.

Most important, and unlike its nearest relatives, C. difficile can readily

exchange genes and resistance elements.

Researcher Dr Mohammed Sebaihia said: " The genome of C. difficile is in a

state of flux.

" More than 10% of the genome consists of mobile elements - sequences that

can move from one organism to another - and this is how it has acquired

genes that make it such an effective pathogen.

" It has gained an array of genes that make it resist antibiotics, help it to

interact with, and thrive in, the human gut and help it to change its

surface.

" This combination gives it a hugely impressive range of resources to help it

prosper in humans. "

Few shared genes

Professor n Wren, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical

Medicine, also worked on the study.

He said only 40% of genes were shared between the eight different strains of

C. difficile analysed.

" Its overall variation is remarkable. The genetic comparison of these

strains will help us understand how C. difficile ticks and help to explain

how the hypervirulent strains emerged and spread so rapidly. "

The study also found that C. difficile produces a chemical called

paracresol, which kills other competing bacteria, and protects it from bile

acids in the gut.

C. difficile thrives in the absence of oxygen and can " hibernate " in adverse

conditions by forming spores.

It is thought these spores are responsible for most human infections, and

because they are highly resistant to most disinfection methods they are very

difficult to eradicate, and can spread easily.

Since 2003, a new and more virulent strain (called NAP1/027) has emerged in

hospitals in North America and is now present in most UK hospitals.

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/health/5109384.stm

Published: 2006/06/25 23:09:25 GMT

© BBC MMVI

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