A monoclonal antibody created by the Nanobiotechnology for Diagnostics group (Nb4D) at the Institute of Advanced Chemistry of Catalonia (IQAC), part of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), ...
A University of Alberta research team has identified a new drug target to treat harmful E. coli bacteria—which cause nearly ...
Cholera remains a major global public health challenge, with an estimated 1.3 to 4 million cases and tens of thousands of deaths reported worldwide each year. Caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae, ...
Professor Anna Panorska and her former master’s student David Kweku (Statistics and Data Science), along with an interdisciplinary and international team of researchers, recently authored an article ...
In a recent study published in Zoonoses, researchers evaluate the prevalence, virulence, antimicrobial resistance, and molecular features of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) from ...
Disrupting quorum sensing in Enterococcus faecalis can backfire, causing larger biofilms, higher antibiotic tolerance, and ...
The two opportunistic pathogens, Acinetobacter baumannii and Klebsiella pneumoniae, are frequently isolated together from polymicrobial infections. The infections that contain both bacteria can be ...
The visualization revealed that virulence activation is achieved through the interaction of ToxR or TcpP with the ...
In infectious disease research, disrupting bacterial communication is widely considered beneficial. A study by UNIGE and NTU Singapore shows this is not always true.
Humans have long had a love-hate relationship with bacteria. While there are bacterial strains that humans cannot live without, such as those that help us digest our food and bolster our immune ...