"The human body has a lot of different ecological niches," Peschel said.
"Maybe this is just the right place to look for new human antibiotics.
"Lugdunin is an example that we've been able to characterise. We're sure there will be others to discover."
Naming their new discovery lugdunin, the researchers said it was the first known example of a new class of peptide antibiotics. Lugdunin is produced by the nostril-dwelling bacterium Staphylococcus lugdunensis (S. lugdunensis).
In experiments with mice, Peschel's team showed it is able to effectively treat a skin infection caused by the bacteria Staphylococcus aureus (S.aureus), which can cause serious and superbug infections.
They also found lugdunin was effective against a wide range of so-called Gram-positive bacteria, including strains of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA).
The researchers then analysed nasal swabs from 187 hospital patients and found that in those who had the S. lugdunensis bacteria in their noses, only 5.9 per cent also harboured the potential infectious S. aureus bacteria.
In those with no S. lugdunensis, however, 34.7 per cent were found to have S. aureus in their noses. This suggests that in the human nose, S. lugdunensis helps to keep S. aureus at bay, the researchers said.
Peschel stressed that the research is at a very early stage and the team would need many years of work, ideally with a pharmaceutical company, before a potential new antibiotic medicine could be developed and tested in clinical trials.
- Reuters, AAP