Since Scottish scientist Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin, the world’s first antibiotic, those wonder drugs have been grown in the laboratory.
Today, Sean Brady, PhD, a microbiologist and associate professor at Rockefeller University in New York City, believes the future of antibiotics may lie in the soil just outside our front doors.
Brady’s discovery, 90 years after Fleming’s revelation in 1928, has arrived as the world is facing an antibiotic crisis.
So-called “superbugs” have evolved resistances to the dozens of highly effective antibiotics.
The result has been infections that are becoming increasingly difficult to treat.