PULLMAN — Washington State University researchers may have found a way to trick bacteria into sending messages that make it easier to kill them, according to a WSU press release.
“The discovery could someday be harnessed as an alternative to antibiotics for treating difficult infections,” the press release said.
Mawra Gamal Saad, WSU graduate student and first author on a paper describing the discovery, said bacterial cells are adaptable and can use their adaptive skills to resist antibiotics.
“Adding the death extracellular vesicles to the bacterial environment, we are kind of cheating the bacteria cells,” Saad said. “The cells don’t know which type of EV they are, but they take them up because they are used to taking them from their environment. And with that, the physiological signals inside the cells change from growth to death.”