• On MovieTome: TRANSFORMERS 2 SPOILERS!
February 27, 2008 5:00 AM PST

Synthetic bacteria-fighting organisms win Lemelson-MIT prize

Timothy Lu, who is trying to bring back a method for fighting bacterial infections that fell out of favor in the West decades ago, has won the prestigious $30,000 Lemelson-MIT student prize for 2008.

Lu and J.J. Collins, professor of biomedical engineering at Boston University, created two bacteriophages that target E. coli. Bacteriophages are viruses that attack bacteria. The idea is to combine bacteriophage with antibiotics to better stamp out infectious diseases. Bacteriophage can also be used in food processing to prevent E. coli from infecting meat or vegetables. (Remember the 2006 spinach recall?)

Administered together, a genetically enhanced bacteriophage and antibiotics can potentially kill 30,000 times more bacteria than antibiotics alone. One of the bacteriophages were shown to be 99.997 percent effective against biofilms, a slime that can cover medical equipment.

Timothy Lu studies a biofilm. He has created bacteriophages that can wipe them out.

(Credit: MIT)

More importantly, the two have created a relatively simple synthetic biology platform for creating new bacteriophages. Synthetic biology involves manipulating the genetic makeup of an organism or creating entirely new organisms out of lab-created strands of genes. Most companies, such as Synthetic Genomics, are developing relatively complex organisms that can turn wood into ethanol or other tasks. Lu's organisms require less engineering. Lu and Collins will next conduct research with the Center for Disease control on the concept. Companies have also approached them about licensing.

"We can find any type of phage, modify it, and combine it with an enzyme," Lu said.

Bacteriophages were used to combat diseases in the early part of the 20th century, Lu said in an interview. Bacteriophages, however, are very specific: a single species may target only one species of bacteria. Scientists back then didn't fully appreciate this, and didn't have the computers and others tools to scan all the different species to find the specific ones needed to fight a particular disease.

When antibiotics came around in the '20s and '30s, scientists gravitated toward them. Developing antibiotics, however, has become complicated and risky. Developing a new drug can cost around $930 million, according to a study from the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development. Bacteria also develop resistance.

Although bacteriophage therapy dropped out of favor in the West, scientists in the old Eastern bloc continued to conduct research in the area.

Lu said he also went with a relatively simple application of synthetic biology to win more public acceptance for the idea. When many people hear the term, they immediately begin to think of Frankenbugs or worry about new types of laboratory-created diseases.

"We want to avoid that kind of battle," he said.

A biofilm. It needs to be killed.

(Credit: MIT)

An undergraduate in electrical engineering, Lu got into biology after working on an MIT project to build a cochlear implant designed to allow deaf people to hear. He was intrigued by biomedical engineering--and one thing led to another. Lu's not alone, of course. Biology has been the most rapidly developing science in the past several years, and many universities are building up their bioengineering departments to capitalize on the expected rush of companies and innovations in the area.

The Lemelson-MIT program awards its annual student prize to MIT students who have invented a noteworthy new process or device. Previous winners include Nathan Ball, who came up with a small device that can pull a human being up a 30-story building in 30 seconds, and Carl Dietrich, who is working on a flying car (or, as Dietrich prefers to call it, a "roadable aircraft") called the Terrafugia.

Recent posts from News Blog
Navy charters kite-powered cargo ship to deliver equipment
EA Mobile, Eidos Interactive sign agreement
Sprint first to offer HTC Touch Pro
Flipping out: RIM BlackBerry Pearl Flip 8220 debuts
Sprint HTC Touch Diamond outed early
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 1 comment
Synthetic bacteria-fighting organisms
by jrsevy February 27, 2008 9:13 AM PST
Food safty is becoming a larger topic with FDA (FSIS). Lactates work well in Ready-to-Eat meats to inhibit listeria (a much worse pathogen than others) and is a substance that occurs naturally in our bodies. Consumers are leary of "chemicals" added to the food we eat. How many people would like to see benzoates or sorbates in their turkey breast? Not many. Now if bacteriophages are added to labels (a virus), how would that sit? The food industry may push back on this as they have with irradiation. Perception is reality.

Russia has used bacteriophages to treat infections for years by finding the right specific ones occuring in nature. Making them synthetically could cause concerns of altering bacteria to become more dangerous if the wrong bacteriophage is employed. What if a nasty bacterum or engineered virus escapes into the wild? In WIKI: "In the case of MRSA, an infecting phage causes the bacteria to become more virulent and difficult to contain."
Reply to this comment
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
Resource center from News.com sponsors
You Need The Speed of Norton 2009
Introducing Norton Internet Security™2009

Click Here!
With one-click, one-minute install, under 8MB of memory usage and fewer, shorter scans, it's the fastest security suite anywhere. Norton. Smart Security, Engineered for Speed. Get a FREE trial today!

Click Here!
The Fastest Security Suite Anywhere

Experience the revolutionary Norton Internet Security™ 2009. With Norton™ Insight, a new feature, you get precision security that targets only at risk files for fewer, faster, shorter scans

Win a Trip to Space!*

Enter the Blast Off with Norton Sweepstakes for your shot at a trip to space. You could experience being fast and weightless, just like the new Norton 2009. *No purchase necessary; click for full details.

FREE Trial!

Act now to get your FREE trial of Norton Internet Security 2009. Try it for the protection. Love it for the speed

Norton Safe Web NEW!

A community-based system that rates web site safety

Norton Labs NEW!

Users can download new security technologies and share input directly with developers. Help us shape our future products!

About News Blog

Recent posts on technology, trends, and more.

Add this feed to your online news reader

News Blog topics

Featured blogs

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right