Health
Supercharged ‘clones’ spark scarlet fever’s re-emergence – EurekAlert
Scarlet fever is on the rise worldwide, after being almost eradicated by the 1940s.
A University of Queensland-led team of international researchers says sup…

Professor Mark Walker and the team found a variety of Streptococcus pyogenes bacteria that had acquired “superantigen” toxins, forming new clones.
“The toxins would have been transferred into the bacterium when it was infected by viruses that carried the toxin genes,” Professor Walker said.
“We’ve shown that these acquired toxins allow Streptococcus pyogenes to better colonise its host, which likely allows it to out-compete other strains.
“These supercharged bacterial clones have been causing…
-
Business24 hours ago
These 4 ASX mining stocks are rocketing as the rare earths boom intensifies
-
General21 hours ago
Bunbury man Stanley J Clemons sentenced for shooting neighbour’s dog
-
Noosa News24 hours ago
Lung cancer researchers identify ‘breakthrough’ patterns predictive of treatment success
-
Noosa News12 hours ago
Warm weather could make way for rain with ‘damaging winds, large hail’