When speaking of motors, most people think of those powering vehicles and human machinery. However, biological motors have ...
A team of microbiologists, chemists and pharmaceutical specialists at Shandong University, Guangzhou Medical University, ...
Researchers have created a novel imaging-technology combination that can capture gene activity in individual bacteria in ...
Few antimicrobial agents are currently available to treat resistant bacteria in cSSSI ... with an evidence-based review of the MDR pathogens causing cSSSIs, the implications of resistance to ...
Rapid detection of foodborne pathogenic bacteria is critical for ensuring food safety and preventing foodborne disease outbreaks. Traditional detection methods, while accurate, are often ...
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is when bacteria evolve and learn how to ... war appears to have accelerated the spread of multi-resistant pathogens in Ukraine. Clinics treating war injuries ...
Tests on the "mysterious balls" which led to the closure of several Australian beaches last week have revealed they were made up partially of faecal bacteria. Nine beaches in Sydney were closed by ...
For more than 100 years, microbiology labs have grown bacteria in nutrient-rich environments — packed with sugars, vitamins and protein extracts from beef and dairy — to study them at their ...
Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, United States ...
Bacterial immune evasion is the process by which bacteria avoid and antagonize the bacterial host response, which is mediated by the host's immune system.
Scientists at Caltech and Princeton University have discovered that bacterial cells growing in a solution of polymers, such as mucus, form long cables that buckle and twist on each other ...
Unlike vaccines, which are tailored to specific viruses, antibiotics are designed to target multiple bacteria, many of which have different ways of resisting treatment. “With antibiotics, you’re ...