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mud loaded with unique bacteria.
Techniques for keeping these
extreme creatures alive in the lab
have advanced in recent years,
so experiments can be carried
out. According to Jaspars, they’ve
done around 100,000 tests, with
targets including the so-called
ESKAPE pathogens. This group of
six bacterial strains are showing
growing resistance to multiple
existing antibiotics.
Ultimately, the PharmaSea

team aims to narrow down two
compounds that can be produced
at a larger scale and put forward for
pre-clinical trials. So far, their most
promising finds are compounds that
could be effective against diseases
of the nervous system, in particular
epilepsy and Alzheimer’s disease.

BENEFITS FOR ALL?
But who owns these discoveries
from the deep? The word
‘bioprospecting’ usually has a

Some sea squirts contain
cancer-fighting agents

PharmaSea
researchers
scouring through
oceanic mud

Brian Murphy’s researchers
hunt for new antibiotics in
unusual locations, such as
this waterfall in Iceland

SCIENCE

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