AI could identify the next superbug-fighting drug

By analyzing the resistance genes and proteins of E. coli, researchers can optimize treatments to address both current and future antimicrobial resistance.

An illustration of rod-shaped bacteria
Current methods of identifying resistance mutations in microbes can miss other ways resistance can develop.
(Image credit: koto_feja/iStock via Getty Images)

Antibiotic resistance is a growing public health problem around the world. When bacteria like E. coli no longer respond to antibiotics, infections become harder to treat.

To develop new antibiotics, researchers typically identify the genes that make bacteria resistant. Through laboratory experiments, they observe how bacteria respond to different antibiotics and look for mutations in the genetic makeup of resistant strains that allow them to survive.

Abdullahi Tunde Aborode
Doctorate Student and Research Assistant, Mississippi State University