PenicillinPenicillin is an antibiotic produced by the Penicillium notatum mold. The antibiotic effect was originally discovered by a young French medical student Ernest Duchesne studying Penicillium glaucum in 1896 but his work was forgotten. \nIt was later rediscovered in 1928 by Alexander Fleming who noticed that a halo of inhibition of bacterial growth in a culture of Staphylococcus around a contaminant blue-green mould. From the culture plate, Fleming concluded that the mould was releasing a substance that was inhibiting bacterial growth. He grew a pure culture and discovered that the fungus was Penicillium notatum - he later named the bacterial inhibiting substance penicillin after the Penicillum notatum that released it. \nUnfortunately, Fleming was convinced after conducting some more experiments that penicillin could not last long enough in the human body to kill pathogenic bacteria and stopped studying penicillin after 1931. \nIt would prove to be the discovery that changed modern medicine. Its chemical structure was determined by Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, enabling synthetic production. A team of Oxford research scientists led by \nAustralian Howard Walter Florey and including Ernst Boris Chain and Norman Heatley discovered a method of mass producing the drug. Florey and Chain shared the 1945 Nobel prize in medicine with Fleming for this work\nPenicillin has since become the most widely used antibiotic to date and is still used for many Gram-positive bacterial infections. Penicillin and penicillin derivatives work by inhibiting the formation of peptidoglycan cross links in the bacterial cell wall by directly competing for the reaction site (the beta-lactam ring of penicillin is a chemical analogue for the enzyme that links the peptidoglycan molecules in bacteria) and thus preventing the bacteria from multiplying (or rather causing cell lysis or death when the bacteria tries to divide). \nSee optical isomerism. Antibiotic resistance to penicillin is now common amongst many hospital acquired bacteria. The resistance to penicillin has been partly (maybe mostly) due to the rise of beta-lactamase producing bacteria which secrete an enzyme that breaks down the beta-lactam ring of penicillin, rendering it harmless to the bacteria.![]() |
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"Fill what's empty, empty what's full, and scratch where it itches." - the Duchess of Windsor, when asked what is the secret of a long and happy life |

