Researchers believe corbomycin could be a 'promising clinical candidate'
Three cases of drug resistant gonorrhoea were seen in the UK in 2018, worrying experts amid rising STI rates.
In terms of gonorrhoea, the number of cases jumped by 249 per cent since 2009.
Experts called the rising resistance to drugs a 'major national and international concern'.
Despite his excitement at a potential combatant to this, Dr Edwards said: 'There is a long and difficult road to generating an antibiotic that can be used in the clinic. Many new antibiotics fail clinical trials because they are found to be too toxic or not sufficiently effective when given to humans.'
Brendan Wren, professor of microbial pathogenesis at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said: 'The study is a promising approach to discovering new antibiotics against MRSA and possibly other bacteria.
'However, as this new group of antibiotics have only been tested in mice, there is still a long way to go before this could be a product as there will be considerations of costs and testing for toxicity and efficacy in humans.'
Dr Claas Kirchhelle, Oxford Martin Programme on Collective Responsibility for Infectious Diseases and Lecturer of the History of Medicine, University College Dublin, welcomed the study.
He said: 'Both the discovery of a novel mode of antibiotic action and the new method of antibiotic screening are great news.
'However, similar to the announcement of other novel modes of antibiotic action over recent years, we will have to wait and see whether this discovery actually makes it to market.
'Of the many 1000 of promising new pharmaceutical compounds discovered or developed each year only very few actually get licensed after many years of further development and testing.