Drug-resistant pathogens form the main threat to global health during the current century. Annually, a lot of patients die in hospitals due to infection with one or more drug-resistant bacteria especially
Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA). In the absence of new effective antimicrobial drugs, the number of deaths said to be increased. Searching for new antibiotics in our backyard form a part of scientist strategies to solve such serious health problem. Insects consider one of such interesting sources of the new era of antimicrobial drugs. Cockroaches as an example can live and adapt in a polluted area for a long time, so through this work field cockroach,
Blattella vaga
was collected from two semi-wild areas around Riyadh, Saudi Arabia for isolation of gut bacteria searching for new antimicrobial agents. Three species of bacteria were identified from field cockroach gut:
Bacillus licheniformis
,
Bacillus subtilis,
and
Kocuria rosea
. The three species were isolated, purified, and tested for their antimicrobial activity against four drug-resistant pathogens (three bacteria:
Salmonella enterica
(ATCC25566),
Staphylococcus aureus
(MRSA) (Clinical strain), and
Streptococcus mutans
(RCMB 017(1) ATCC ® 25175™) and one fungus:
Candida albicans
(RCMB005003(1) ATCC® 10231™)). The results show no antimicrobial activity of
Bacillus subtilis
and very good activity
Bacillus licheniformis
and
Kocuria rosea. Bacillus licheniformis
gives very effective activity against
Candida albicans
while
Kocuria rosea
is effective against MRSA and
Streptococcus mutans
. None of the gut isolated bacteria show any activity against
Salmonella enterica
. Such results revealed that the metabolites of these bacteria could be used as substitutes to the already used antibiotics to overcome the problem of multidrug-resistant human pathogens.