Off the wire
Across China: Thawing permafrost may accelerate global warming  • Volcano on Japanese island of Kuchinoerabu erupts for 2nd straight day  • Australian scientists believe high-fiber diet combats asthma  • Former senior Jiangxi official jailed for bribery  • Former senior political advisor expelled from CPC  • Tokyo stocks close 0.81 pct higher on bargain hunting, yen's weakness  • Japan attempting to challenge post-war order by saying to scrutinize "Tokyo trials"  • Top Chinese, U.S. universities launch Global Innovation Exchange Institute in Seattle  • Copa America results and standings  • 3rd Ld Writethru: Denmark's opposition coalition wins 2015 parliamentary election  
You are here:   Home

Australia chemists launches global hunt for new antibiotics to combat superbugs

Xinhua, June 19, 2015 Adjust font size:

Australian chemists have launched a global search to find antibiotics to combat superbug bacteria that are resistant to current antibiotics.

The Queensland University bioscience researchers will use a 3.1 million Australian dollar (2.41 U.S. dollars) grant from the London-based medical charity Wellcome Trust to individually examine antibiotics they hope to be sent from around the world.

The initiative invites global chemists to submit their compounds for free screening for antimicrobial activity.

Initiative Director Professor Matthew Cooper said antibiotic resistance research is vital.

"We are heading towards a return to the pre-antibiotic era, when even simple infections caused death," Professor Cooper said on Friday.

"Now it is time to act."

The scientists hope to screen more than 50,000 chemical compounds in the next 18 months.

"We aim to help researchers around the world find new, diverse compounds to combat the superbug crisis," Professor Cooper said.

"Each year chemists around the world make millions of compounds, most of these are not designed as antibiotic drugs and would not otherwise be screened for antimicrobial activity.

"The next antibiotic could be out there, sitting on someone's shelf." Endi