Health & Medicine - Posted by Timothy Wall-Missouri on Wednesday, September 26, 2012 6:40 - 2 Comments    
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‘Bugs’ team with chlorine to clean water

Infectious bacteria received a taste of their own medicine when researchers used viruses to destroy colonies of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which can cause potentially fatal infections. (Credit: Denise Chan/Flickr)

U. MISSOURI (US) — Researchers used viruses to infect and kill colonies of a common disease-causing bacteria and believe they could be used to help sanitize water.


“Our experiment was the first to use bacteriophages in conjunction with chlorine to destroy biofilms, which are layers of bacteria growing on a solid surface,” says Zhiqiang Hu, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Missouri’s College of Engineering. “The advantage to using viruses is that they can selectively kill harmful bacteria.

“Beneficial bacteria, such as those used to break down wastes in water treatment plants, are largely unaffected. Hence, viruses could be used to get rid of pathogenic bacteria in water filters that would otherwise have to be replaced.  They could save taxpayers’ money by reducing the cost of cleaning water.”

Straight from the Source

Read the original study

DOI: 10.1002/bit.24630

As reported in the journal Biotechnology and Bioengineering, bacteria can be difficult to kill when they form a biofilm. The outer crust of bacteria can be killed by chlorine, but the inner bacteria are sheltered. Viruses solve this problem because they spread through an entire colony of bacteria. The bacteriophages are easier to create than the enzymes used to attack biofilms and are also better at targeting specific bacterial species.

Hu and recent graduate Yanyan Zhang found the greatest success in killing biofilms by using a combination of bacteriophages and chlorine. An initial treatment with viruses followed by chlorine knocked out 97 percent of biofilms within five days of exposure. When used alone, viruses removed 89 percent of biofilms, while chlorine removed only 40 percent.

“The methods we used to kill Pseudomonas aeruginosa could be used against other dangerous bacteria, even those that have developed resistance to antibiotics,” Hu says. “Our work opened the door to a new strategy for combating the dangers and costs of bacterial biofilms. The next step is to expand our experiment into a pilot study.”

Source: University of Missouri

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Bryan Bauer
Sep 27, 2012 9:03

This could be used to destroy bio films in dental lines and maybe in the oral cavity where bio films are responsible for decay and gum disease. just a dentist wondering about future use of technology.

home cleaning services
Oct 6, 2012 11:20

If you are planning a home renovation, make sure you have some way to dispose of construction debris. Any major renovation project is going to result in a lot of debris and much of it will be substances that shouldn’t be mixed in with city trash. Plan ahead and you won’t be stuck with it.

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