
Top stories

Marketing & MediaWarner Bros. was “nice to have” but not at any price, says Netflix
Karabo Ledwaba 14 hours




Logistics & TransportMaersk reroutes sailings around Africa amid Red Sea constraints
Louise Rasmussen 7 hours

More news

















The researchers have discovered how cells within the bladder are able to sense the presence of E. coli bacteria hiding within compartments in the bladder's own cells. This starts a process that then kicks them out.
Knowing how the bladder's own cells sense the bacteria and what they do to expel them are both processes the Duke scientists think they can exploit to do a better job of helping the bladder protect itself. New treatments based on their findings might be able to tackle antibiotic-resistant UTIs and perhaps even bacterial infections in other parts of the body, said Soman Abraham, a professor of pathology at Duke.
The findings appear in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Source: Duke University Medical Centre