A new research points the way to a vaccine that may prevent urinary tract infections caused by E. coli.
![Vaccine for Urinary Tract Infections Possible Soon Vaccine for Urinary Tract Infections Possible Soon](https://images.medindia.net/health-images/1200_1000/kidney-2.jpg)
"If we want to prevent infections in humans, we need to look at what's going on with the bacteria while it's in humans," said Harry L.T. Mobley, the study's senior investigator.
Mobley's team found that specific surface structures of the E. coli found in mouse infections, which scientists consider a key to how the bugs thrive, were not prevalent in the human samples.
"That tells us it's more complicated than we thought and that there are some important differences we need to study in human infections," said Erin C. Hagan, one of the study's two first authors.
Last year, Mobley's team published a study that showed a vaccine they had developed prevented infection and produced key types of immunity in mice.
Even though researchers found differences in gene expression in the mouse and human samples, key targets of the vaccine related to iron acquisition were found in both samples, raising hopes that the vaccine would work in humans.
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Gary J. Faerber, of the University of Michigan Medical School said that urinary tract infections are an increasing concern and he has seen the number of infections that are resistant to common antibiotic treatments rapidly increase in recent years.
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The findings were published online PLoS Pathogens.
Source-ANI