#amphibian conservation

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Science

Frog Gut Bacteria "Cures" Colon Cancer 100% in Mice — But Should You Actually Be Excited?

A team at Japan's JAIST published findings in Gut Microbes showing that Ewingella americana — a bacterium isolated from Japanese tree frog intestines — achieved 100% complete remission in a subcutaneous Colon-26 syngeneic mouse model after a single intravenous injection, with n=3 to n=5 mice per group and no human clinical data; this is explicitly a preclinical proof-of-concept study, not a human cancer treatment. According to a 2024 meta-analysis in PLOS Biology, preclinical cancer treatments reach human regulatory approval at a rate of only approximately 5%, and the average development timeline from animal studies to FDA approval spans 10 to 15 years, meaning even an optimally proceeding program would not reach patients until the mid-2030s at the earliest. A critical safety paradox complicates the path to the clinic: a 2025 case report documented E. americana causing multidrug-resistant sepsis in a 21-year-old cancer patient undergoing chemotherapy, which means the immunocompromised patients who most need a new cancer therapy may be precisely those most vulnerable to the bacterium itself. The study's dual mechanism — selective accumulation in hypoxic tumor microenvironments combined with direct cytolysin-mediated cytotoxicity and T-cell/B-cell/neutrophil immune activation — advances scientific understanding significantly beyond the empirical bacterial cancer treatments of the 19th century, most notably Coley's toxins, by providing a molecular explanation that enables rational engineering and optimization of the approach. The findings simultaneously raise a structural critique of pharmaceutical R&D incentives that have steered four decades of drug discovery away from natural microbiomes, and a pressing conservation argument about the 41% of amphibian species globally facing extinction — a natural chemical library humanity is actively erasing before it can be catalogued.

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