Scientists Discover New Antibiotic in Tropical Forests
Scientists have discovered an antibiotic produced by a soil bacterium from a Mexican tropical forest that may help lead to a ‘plant probiotic,’ more robust plants and other antibiotics. The new antibiotic, known as phazolicin, prevents harmful bacteria from getting into the root systems of bean plants.
Phazolicin
- The bacterium that produces phazolicin, is an unidentified species of Rhizobium.
- It was found in tropical forests in Los Tuxtlas, Mexico, in the soil and roots of wild beans called Phaseolus vulgaris, hence the antibiotic’s name: phazolicin.
- Like other Rhizobia, the phazolicin-producing microbe forms nodules on bean plant roots and provides plants ....
Do You Want to Read More?
Subscribe Now
Take Annual Subscription and get the following Advantage
The annual members of the Civil Services Chronicle can read the monthly content of the magazine as well as the Chronicle magazine archives.
Readers can study all the material before the last six months of the Civil Services Chronicle monthly issue in the form of Chronicle magazine archives.
Related Content
- 1 Right to Repair & Repairability Index (RI)
- 2 Yak Genomics
- 3 Tamil Nadu Synchronized Bird Survey Report
- 4 Euthalia malaccana
- 5 Tsarap Chu Conservation Reserve
- 6 Asiatic Lions in Gujarat
- 7 Operation Olivia – Marine Conservation Milestone
- 8 Ocean Pollution
- 9 New Fish Species Found in Meghalaya Cave
- 10 Red-Crowned Roofed Turtle