Stinky Frogs Contain Many Wondrous Things

By Celsias

5 comments

Posted on Dec. 3, 2011. Listed in:

Some of the nastiest smelling creatures on Earth have skin that produces the greatest known variety of anti-bacterial substances that hold promise for becoming new weapons in the battle against antibiotic-resistant infections, scientists are reporting. Their research on amphibians so smelly (like rotten fish, for instance) that scientists term them “odorous frogs” appears in ACS’ Journal of Proteome Research.

frogs3

Yun Zhang, Wen-Hui Lee and Xinwang Yang explain that scientists long have recognized frogs’ skin as a rich potential source of new antibiotics. Frogs live in warm, wet places where bacteria thrive and have adapted skin that secretes chemicals, known as peptides, to protect themselves from infections. Zhang’s group wanted to identify the specific antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), and the most potent to give scientists clues for developing new antibiotics.

antimicrobial peptidesThey identified more than 700 of these substances from nine species of odorous frogs and concluded that the AMPs account for almost one-third of all AMPs found in the world, the greatest known diversity of these germ-killing chemicals. Interestingly, some of the AMPs have a dual action, killing bacteria directly and also activating the immune system to assist in the battle.

5 comments

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fascinating; and we mustn't forget the princes contained therein either! ;)

Written in December 2011

janeyew 10°

Oh, so it's the stinky ones that contain the princes! Damn-I've wasted so much time kissing the wrong ones.

Written in December 2011

Debra

Oh,,,there are sooo many frogs to choose from. I'm pleased they contain so many useful things because they surely don't contain princes.

Written in December 2011

Vinnie

Well Debra, really sorry to say that there are not sooooo many frogs to choose from....For instance, the green bell frog which my son and I have two of ( and you're right, no princes inside....just a couple of prince's feeding them :) ) are becoming much harder to find these days.....They used to be found in a very large part of Australia and quite a large part of New Zealand but they are only found in less than 1 tenth of those areas now :( Oh and the Green Bell frog doesn't smell.

Written in December 2011

Brad M

So you are clearly kissing the wrong frogs, Debra....some of us really are princes... You just haven't found us yet...

Written in December 2011

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