Gianpaolo Grassi

Biomedicine

A New MRSA Defense

Marijuana extracts kill antibiotic-resistant MRSA without a high.

  • Friday, September 12, 2008
  • By Nora Schultz

Substances harvested from cannabis plants could soon outshine conventional antibiotics in the escalating battle against drug-resistant bacteria. The compounds, called cannabinoids, appear to be unaffected by the mechanism that superbugs like MRSA use to evade existing antibiotics. Scientists from Italy and the United Kingdom, who published their research in the Journal of Natural Products last month, say that cannabis-based creams could also be developed to treat persistent skin infections.

Cannabis has long been known to have antibacterial properties and was studied in the 1950s as a treatment for tuberculosis and other diseases. But research into using cannabis as an antibiotic has been limited by poor knowledge of the plant's active ingredients and by the controversy surrounding its use as a recreational drug.

Now Giovanni Appendino of the Piemonte Orientale University, in Italy, and Simon Gibbons of the School of Pharmacy at the University of London, U.K., have revisited the antibiotic power of marijuana by systematically testing different cannabinoids' ability to kill MRSA.

MRSA, short for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, is a bacterium that can cause difficult-to-treat infections since it does not respond to many antibiotics. Many healthy people carry S. aureus on their skin, but problems arise when multi-drug-resistant strains infect people with weak immune systems through an open wound. In the worst cases, the bug spreads throughout the body, causing a life-threatening infection.

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To make matters worse, resistance to antibiotics is rapidly increasing, and some strains are now even immune to vancomycin, a powerful antibiotic that is normally used only as a last resort when other drugs fail.

But when Appendino, Gibbons, and their colleagues applied extracts from five major cannabinoids to bacterial cultures of six strains of MRSA, they discovered that the cannabinoids were as effective at killing the bugs as vancomycin and other antibiotics.

"The cannabinoids even showed exceptional activity against the MRSA strain that makes extra amounts of the proteins that give the bugs resistance against many antibiotics," says Gibbons. These proteins, he explains, allow the bacteria to "hoover up unwanted things from inside the cell and spit them out again."

Conveniently, of the five cannabinoids tested by the researchers, the two most effective ones also happen to be nonpsychoactive, meaning that they cannot cause a high. "What this means is, we could use fiber hemp plants that have no use as recreational drugs to cheaply and easily produce potent antibiotics," says Appendino.

In an attempt to discover how the cannabinoids kill MRSA, the team manipulated several chemical groups within the compounds. Most of the changes did not affect the antibiotic activity at all, and those that did seemed to influence only how well the cannabinoid is taken up by the bacterial cells.

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Jimk

3 Comments

  • 1249 Days Ago
  • 09/12/2008

MRSA

Garlic also is effective against MRSA, My son contracted a MRSA while in a hospital. He was being treated for 3rd degree burns. He has taken garlic capsules and it has improved the condition of his skin, sores actually healed. He was on no antibiotics at the time

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LDighera

13 Comments

  • 1249 Days Ago
  • 09/12/2008

Antibacterial Cannabinoids from Cannabis sativa: A Structure-Activity Study

Click here for full article

Antibacterial Cannabinoids from Cannabis sativa: A Structure-Activity Study
Giovanni Appendino, Simon Gibbons, Anna Giana, Alberto Pagani, Gianpaolo Grassi, Michael Stavri

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mkogrady

423 Comments

  • 1249 Days Ago
  • 09/12/2008

Leverage for Legalizing Mary-Jane

This may be an additional component for the legalization of the drug. I believe those cannabis chemicals are not "reactive" till you heat them up, so a cold temp distallation method of recovering them may be all that's needed. Aside from the possibility of having these drugs trip up Company Drug Screening Tools, this is a neat example of finding a diamond in the rough.

On the other hand - it takes away some of the fun of some medical treatments!

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infectioncures

1 Comment

  • 1093 Days Ago
  • 02/15/2009

marijuana and MRSA

this is a funny article! Who ever thought marijuana would help cure an infectious disease? I guess it hasn't been fully proven or tested yet, but it's encouraging to know there are natural substances out there that can cure this terrible MRSA staph infection!

I posted a lot of free tips on MRSA treatment, MRSA symptoms, and MRSA pictures on my website since I battled with MRSA for over a year. Check it out at www.infectioncures.com

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