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posted by n1 on Wednesday August 10 2016, @03:28AM   Printer-friendly
from the cash-only dept.

Three young scientists thing they have a way to defeat antibiotic resistance:

Three college-age scientists think they know how to solve a huge problem facing medicine. They think they've found a way to overcome antibiotic resistance. Many of the most powerful antibiotics have lost their efficacy against dangerous bacteria, so finding new antibiotics is a priority. It's too soon to say for sure if the young researchers are right, but if gumption and enthusiasm count for anything, they stand a fighting chance.

[...] Last October, Stanford launched a competition for students interested in developing solutions for big problems in health care. Not just theoretical solutions, but practical, patentable solutions that could lead to real products. The three young scientists thought they had figured out a way to make a set of proteins that would kill antibiotic resistant bacteria. They convinced a jury of Stanford faculty, biotech types and investors that they were onto something, and got $10,000 to develop their idea.

[...] "The way that our proteins operate, that if the bacteria evolve resistance to them, actually the bacteria can no longer live anymore," says Rosenthal. "We target something that's essential to bacterial survival." Bacteria have managed to evolve a way around even the most sophisticated attempts to kill them, so I was curious to know more about how the proteins these young inventors say they've found worked. "We're not able to disclose, unfortunately," says Filsinger Interrante. It's their intellectual property, she explains, that they hope will attract investors. "We think that our protein has the potential to target very dangerous, multidrug-resistant bacteria."

Peer review, meet news review.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 10 2016, @04:27PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 10 2016, @04:27PM (#386308)

    Nobody's going to manufacture it.

    The days of drugs being manufactured exclusively by big corps are coming to an end. New technologies will allow many drugs (not just meth) and biologics to be manufactured by one machine in the garage.

  • (Score: 2) by SecurityGuy on Wednesday August 10 2016, @05:47PM

    by SecurityGuy (1453) on Wednesday August 10 2016, @05:47PM (#386333)

    Old technologies allow drugs to be manufactured in the garage. Compounds that are tested now aren't necessarily manufactured by big pharmaceutical corporations. The point remains that we have no reason to believe this protein actually does anything yet, or that if it does anything in a petri dish, it would actually work in a human, or if it actually works in a human, that it wouldn't have other negative effects that make it not therapeutically viable.

    I'm not against stuff like this, I've just seen it before. A friend died of cancer ~17 years ago and right after a breakthrough treatment was discovered by a researcher I'd followed for years (I was in cancer research at the time). Oh, the terrible timing of it all. Except that it turned out the treatment didn't really work in people. Even if it had been discovered before she was diagnosed, it was irrelevant. It didn't work.

    The time to get excited about this is when it makes it through a successful clinical trial. Until then, they're college kids who have an idea good enough to win a small competition, but won't release any data so anybody else can even begin to meaningfully speculate if there's anything at all here. Stuff like that happens all the time.

    An MD/Ph.D. friend of mine likes to say that it's nice that compound X kills cancer in a petri dish...but so does a handgun.

  • (Score: 2) by Joe Desertrat on Wednesday August 10 2016, @09:22PM

    by Joe Desertrat (2454) on Wednesday August 10 2016, @09:22PM (#386392)

    The days of drugs being manufactured exclusively by big corps are coming to an end. New technologies will allow many drugs (not just meth) and biologics to be manufactured by one machine in the garage.

    Maybe on both of these statements, but the cynic in me knows that big corps tend to respond to either of these sort of threats by buying legislation putting a stop to them.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 11 2016, @02:15AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 11 2016, @02:15AM (#386482)

      vote with your feet.

      Governments only work if they have enough money and manpower to operate. Take away enough of either and they will collapse until their own weight.