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Out of Your Hands. Penn and Teller on Vaccinations. Interactive video: Synthetic viruses. 27 March 2013Last updated at 18:00 ET BBC medical correspondent Fergus Walsh explains how British scientists have used a new technique to develop a synthetic virus which heralds a major development in vaccines.

Interactive video: Synthetic viruses

Continue reading the main story Click on the hotspots which appear in this video to find out more. This interactive content is best viewed on the desktop site. X Viruses are the most common biological unit on Earth, outnumbering all other types put together. British scientists have created a synthetic version of the foot and mouth virus. Watching an infection take hold in 3D and in real time. 1 July 2012Last updated at 19:54 ET By James Gallagher Health and science reporter, BBC News A CT scan shows how a bacterial infection moves around a mouse's body What does an infection look like as it takes hold in the body?

Watching an infection take hold in 3D and in real time

Gamifying Epidemic Prevention. Experimental drug could defeat any virus. Viruses might soon meet their kryptonite: an experimental drug that can, in theory, obliterate cells infected by any type of virus without harming healthy neighbours.

Experimental drug could defeat any virus

For 50 years, we have been fighting viruses in two ways: drugs for existing infections and vaccines to prevent infection in the first place. However, most drugs or vaccines are specific to one virus, viral strain or family of related viruses. When a virus mutates – as they so often do – researchers must retool our medicines. The new drug targets a molecule common to all virus-infected cells. Nearly every virus generates strings of double-stranded RNA longer than 30 base pairs during transcription and replication, in an attempt to duplicate itself and commandeer its host cell's machinery. The immune artillery within mammalian cells includes a protein that exploits this viral characteristic.

Unleash the enzymes Draconian measures Journal reference: PLoS One, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0022572. Superfast drugs target shape-shifting enzymes. It all happens in a femtosecond – a quadrillionth of a second.

Superfast drugs target shape-shifting enzymes

That's the time an enzyme needs to shape-shift into its most reactive form, trigger a chemical reaction and snap back into its original shape. We can now enter this high-speed world to interrupt the chemical reactions that sustain some of our deadliest pathogens and cause disease. Doing so could lead to antibiotics that won't trigger bacterial resistance. In 1946, Nobel laureate Linus Pauling suggested that enzymes are most active during fleeting transition states, but only recently has Vern Schramm at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in Yeshiva University, New York, moved the science from the blackboard to the clinic.

"The problem in this whole field has been no one really knew what the structure of an enzyme's transition state looked like," he says. Over the course of a decade, Schramm has reconstructed those states, using computational and molecular modelling techniques. Lower dosage. Bacteria defeat antibiotics they have never met before. BACTERIA that resist antibiotics are a growing problem worldwide, but one we thought we could limit or even reverse by better control of the drugs.

Bacteria defeat antibiotics they have never met before

The situation may be more complicated: some bacteria that have never seen an antibiotic can evolve resistance, and even thrive on it. Bacteria usually become resistant if they are exposed to drug levels too low to kill them off, but high enough to favour the survival of resistant mutants. Such resistance is growing and could make TB and other diseases untreatable again. The prevailing notion was that bacteria acquire and maintain resistance genes at a cost.

So by carefully controlling antibiotics, we should keep resistance from emerging by itself – and any that does emerge due to antibiotic misuse should die out as soon as the drug is withdrawn and resistance is no longer an advantage. Viewpoint: How do our bacteria help us? 19 October 2011Last updated at 10:08 The bacteria that live in and on us might be responsible for whether we are healthy or unhealthy, and even whether we are fat or thin, writes Ed Yong.

Viewpoint: How do our bacteria help us?

I was born just under 30 years ago. That moment, just before I emerged into the world, was the last time in my life that I would be completely sterile. Inside the womb, it was just me and mum - a universe of two. But outside, there was a world of bacteria and other microbes, and as soon I entered that world, they became part of me. Pollution cuts improve heart health - Beijing study. 15 May 2012Last updated at 19:31 ET By Emily Selvadurai Health reporter, BBC News Pollution remains a problem in Beijing Cutting air pollution has an instant impact on heart health, experts believe, after reviewing studies of the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Pollution cuts improve heart health - Beijing study

The work in the Journal of the American Medical Association involved medical tests on 125 volunteers living in one of the world's most polluted cities. When pollution dipped during the Games, the researchers saw significant signs of better health among the volunteers. They say this is "biological proof" that pollution can harm the heart. The British Heart Foundation said the link between heart disease and pollution had been known for some time but it was still not clear why this relationship existed. Factories closed China took major steps to improve Beijing air quality for the 2008 Olympic Games after the International Olympic Committee had warned of some events being postponed.