Eczema-taming ointment could be made with bacteria from your own skin – Genetic Literacy Project

Posted: Published on March 1st, 2017

This post was added by Dr Simmons

Teruaki Nakatsuji and Richard Gallo from the University of California, San Diego, have discovered that some bacteria which naturally live on human skin produce chemicals that kill S. aureus[a bacterium that can cause severe skin infections].

[The duo then] went after the bacteria themselvesisolating them from people with a skin disease called atopic dermatitis (eczema), growing them, and adding them to a cream. The result: a personalized ointment for killing S. aureusand hopefully treating eczemausing bacteria that come from a persons own skin.

The team focused on one [type of bacterium]a strain of S. hominis called A9Strain A9 produces several new antibiotics that seem to specifically suppress the growth of S. aureus, including the drug-resistant versions that we know as MRSA.

Protective staph strains like A9 dominate the skins of healthy people, buteven in people with eczema, the protective strains arent totally absent. Theyre still there. So what happens if you give them a boost?

As expected, the levels of S. aureus fell by more than 90 percent. In two cases, the troublesome microbe disappeared entirely.

Its a big step towards using microbial therapies to treat skin disease, says Shruti Naik, from Rockerfeller University.

The GLP aggregated and excerpted this blog/article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion, and analysis. Read full, original post:A Probiotic Skin Cream Made With a Persons Own Microbes

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Eczema-taming ointment could be made with bacteria from your own skin - Genetic Literacy Project

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