How do antibiotics kill bacterial cells but not human cells? (pointy haired bosses (phb) at Scientific American broke the link so I removed it – see links in comments below that are not broken by phb behavior)
Most bacteria produce a cell wall that is composed partly of a macromolecule called peptidoglycan, itself made up of amino sugars and short peptides. Human cells do not make or need peptidoglycan. Penicillin, one of the first antibiotics to be used widely, prevents the final cross-linking step, or transpeptidation, in assembly of this macromolecule. The result is a very fragile cell wall that bursts, killing the bacterium.
Read more blog posts on antibiotics and on health care.

Pingback: CuriousCat: Drug Resistant Bacteria More Common
Pingback: Curious Cat Science and Engineering Blog » CDC Urges Increased Effort to Reduce Drug-Resistant Infections
Pingback: Curious Cat Science and Engineering Blog » Evolution In Action
Pingback: CuriousCat: Tuberculosis Risk
Pingback: Curious Cat: Why is the Sky Blue?
Pingback: CuriousCat: Disrupting the Replication of Bacteria
Pingback: Curious Cat Science Blog » How Bleach Kills Bacteria
Pingback: Antibiotic resistance: How do antibiotics kill bacteria? » Curious Cat Science and Engineering Blog