New CRISPR Breakthrough Targets Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria
New CRISPR Breakthrough Targets Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria A New Way to Think About Antibiotic Resistance Antibiotic resistance is not some distant, abstract problem tucked away in medical journals. It is already here, quietly reshaping how doctors treat infections. Bacteria that once folded quickly under a standard course of antibiotics are now digging in, adapting, and sometimes flat out ignoring the drugs we rely on. If projections hold, resistant infections could be responsible for more than 10 million deaths per year by 2050. That number is staggering. It is the kind of statistic that makes you pause, then wonder whether we are already too late. But maybe we are not. Researchers at the University of California San Diego have developed a new genetic tool that does something unusual. Instead of trying to invent yet another antibiotic in an endless arms race, they are attempting to strip bacteria of their resistance altogether. Not kill them outright. Not just suppress them. Actua...