by Steve Connor, Science Correspondent
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Insects entombed in fossilized amber for tens of millions of years have provided the key to creating a new generation of antibiotic drugs that could wage war on modern diseases. Scientists have isolated the antibiotics from microbes found either inside the intestines of the amber-encased insects or in soil particles trapped with them when they were caught by sticky tree resin up to 130 million years ago. Spores of the microbes have survived an unprecedented period of suspended animation, enabling scientists to revive them in the laboratory.
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Research over the past two years has uncovered at least four antibiotics from the microbes and one has been able to kill modern drug resistant bacteria that can cause potentially deadly diseases in humans. Present-day antibiotics have nearly all been isolated from micro-organisms that use them as a form of defense against their predators or competitors. But since the introduction of antibiotics into medicine 50 years ago, an alarming number have become ineffective because many bacteria have developed resistance to the drugs. The antibiotics that were in use millions of years ago may prove more deadly against drug-resistant modem strains of disease-causing bacteria.
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Raul Cano, who has pioneered the research at the
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A biotechnology company, Amber gene has been set up to develop the antibiotics into drugs. If any ancient microbes are revived that resemble present-day diseases, they will be destroyed in case they escape and cause new epidemics. Drug companies will be anxious to study the chemical structures of the prehistoric antibiotics to see bow they differ from modern drugs. They hope that one ancient antibiotic molecule could be used as a basis to synthesize a range of drugs.
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There have been several attempts to extract material such as DNA from fossilized life-forms ranging from Egyptian mummies to dinosaurs but many were subsequently shown to be contaminated. Cano’s findings have been hailed as a break-through by scientists, Edward Goldenberg, an expert on extracting DNA from fossilized life-forms at
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However, even the discovery of ancient antibiotics may not halt the rise of drug-resistant bacteria. Stuart Levy, a micro-biologist at
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