Have you ever wondered how snails
can spend their time crawling over dirt rife with potentially dangerous
bacteria but manage to stay healthy? Two British scientists did, and this led
them to discover new proteins that can fight harmful bacteria.
Who would think of
looking to the humble garden snail for a solution to antibioticresistance, the phenomenon
of harmful bacteria becoming unresponsive to drugs that could previously defeat
them?
As it turns out, two
researchers from the United Kingdom, who also happen to be husband and wife.
They are Sarah Pitt,
Ph.D., principal lecturer in the School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Science at
the University of Brighton, and Alan Gunn, Ph.D., subject lead for biosciences
in the School of Natural Sciences and Psychology at Liverpool John Moores
University.
According to Pitt, the
idea just occurred to her husband, who expressed curiosity about the resilience
of garden snails: "He was idly wondering about snails moving over the
soil, etc., in a garden which is full of bacteria and how/why they appear to
stay healthy. Was there something in the mucus which fought against
infections?"
This snail mucus soon
became the subject of an undergraduate student project that Gunn coordinated to
investigate whether any components of the mucus might have antimicrobial
properties.
However, as Gunn
started discussing his laboratory methods with Pitt, she noted that his
procedures were not likely to be successful.
"He thought something
interesting might be happening, but when I discussed his lab methods, it was
clear he was doing it all wrong. So, I did what wives tend to do and said 'you
are doing that all wrong — give it to me, and I'll sort it out' — which I
did."
Sarah Pitt, Ph.D.
After Pitt took over the investigation, the researchers' study
yielded some surprising results — they discovered four previously unknown
proteins in the snail mucus.
Moreover, two of these proteins proved to have strong
antimicrobial properties, particularly against aggressive strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a bacterium that causes dangerous lung infections in people
with cystic
fibrosis.
The antibacterial potential of snail mucus
In their study, the results of which now appear in the British Journal of
Biomedical Science, the researchers collected mucus from common
garden snails (Cornu aspersum) and found that it was able to inhibit various strains of P. aeruginosa that had come from individuals with cystic
fibrosis-related infections.
"In previous work, we found that the mucus consistently and
convincingly inhibited the growth of one species of bacterium P. aeruginosa, a tough bacterium that can cause disease, but it did not seem
to work against other bacteria," says Pitt.
"So, in this study," she continues, "we tried all
the control strains of P.
aeruginosa we had available in the lab here at the
university as well as five strains taken from patients with [cystic fibrosis]
who had lung infections with this bacterium."
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