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by hga
4185 days ago
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So maybe what you were getting at is that a plasmid exists out in the world that encodes the protein for resistance, it just didn't happen to exist in the researchers niche world.... Per cowsandmilk the senior author of the publication "is one of the world's foremost experts on antibiotic resistance". The paper discusses how there seems to be little gene transfer between the "biome" of soil bacteria from which this and vancomycin come and the relevant pathogens. They specifically cite that it took 30 years for any resistance to develop to vancomycin. Whereas I'd add β-Lactam antibiotics seem to be pretty common (they are derived from at least 5 different organisms that I just counted in Wikipedia), and β-Lactamases are all too common; per Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta-lactamase the first was discovered in 1940 before penicillin was in clinical use. |
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