Find a new drug that can replace antibiotics
According to Australian radio, on July 30, Australian city scientists in Melbourne said they have made a breakthrough in the field of research on antibiotics for antibiotics.
For the past six years, researchers at Monash University in Melbourne, together with colleagues at Rockfeller University and the University of Maryland, have been studying the protein structure of the virus called PlyC.
Scientists said that it was discovered that the way PlyC kills bacteria that cause infections, including sore throat, pneumonia and streptococcal toxin shock syndrome.
According to the researchers, this protein is a very powerful antibacterial killer and the discovery of PlyC's way to kill bacteria is an important step in the development of antibiotics for antibiotics.
For more than 40 years, researchers are still trying to decipher PlyC's structure. According to Dr. Sheena McGowan of Monash University, the identification of PlyC's atomic structure is an important achievement to understand how to apply them to fight bacteria.
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