Scientific News Health care Prosthetic repair & Transplants SYNTHETIC ANTIFREEZE COULD PREVENT ICE GROWTH
SYNTHETIC
ANTIFREEZE COULD PREVENT ICE GROWTH
A
fish swimming in icy polar waters is helping scientists find ways to protect
food from freezer burn, save fruit crops from frost, and use low temperature
storage in complicated medical procedures like human organ transplants,
researchers report.
A way to make large amounts of artificial
antifreeze safe enough to use in living organisms has been developed by
researchers looking at the “biological” antifreeze used by Arctic and
Antarctic teleost fish, according to a report in the September/October issue of
Bioconjugate Chemistry, a peer-reviewed journal of the American
Chemical Society, the world’s largest scientific society. The report will
be presented August 30 at the Society’s 222nd national meeting in Chicago.
A big problem with the freezing process in
medical and industrial applications is that the formation of ice crystals
damages living material. Certain organisms like the fish, however, have
developed a successful defense — a naturally produced antifreeze called
antifreeze glycoprotein, or AFGP. The biological AFGP in fish, and in some
amphibians, plants and insects, prevents the growth of ice in those life forms,
scientists have found.
While researchers have known about the
glycoproteins for many years, they have been unable to produce large or stable
enough copies for commercial applications, and the use of the natural compounds
themselves is too labor and cost-intensive to be practical.
Even though researchers do not precisely
understand the mechanism by which the AFGPs function, they have been able to
modify the structure of the fish AFGP enough to build a longer lasting mimic, a
lot like the native AFGPs, according to Robert Ben, Ph.D., who led the research
team from the State University of New York in Binghamton. Ben says the new
method can easily produce large quantities of the compound that yield only to
inhospitable conditions like extremely high or low temperatures.
The new synthetic proteins “are dramatically
different from the natural antifreeze glycoprotein, but still display the
ability to inhibit ice growth,” Ben said. “This is very significant and may
mean a real leap forward in the design of such compounds; we think this is
incredibly promising for a number of applications.”
Among potential uses for synthetic AFGP’s: a
frost protection spray for crops that could expand growing seasons and even
allow fruits to grow in more northern climates. He also believes elimination of
freezer burn is possible, along with the preservation of human organs and
tissues for transplantation.
In essence, Ben reports, the new method replaces
a weak chemical bond in the natural antifreeze with a far more durable one, but
further study to develop greater strength in the artificial glycoprotein is
ongoing. He said he anticipates that researchers will construct different
variations of the modified antifreeze for different applications.
###
The research cited above was funded by the
American Chemical Society, the U.S. National Institutes of Health and A/F
Protein, a biotechnology firm in Waltham, Mass.
— By Jonathan Lifland
The online version of the research paper cited
above will be published August 20 on the journal’s Web site. Journalists can
arrange access to this site by sending an email to newsroom@acs.org <mailto:newsroom@acs.org>
or calling the contact person for this release.
The paper from this research, ORGN 624, will be
presented at 3 p.m., Thursday, August 30, at the McCormick Place Convention
Center, Lakeside Center Room E450 on level 4 during the symposium
“Combinatorial and Solid-Phase Chemistry.”
Robert N. Ben, Ph.D., is an assistant professor
in the department of chemistry at the State University of New York in Binghamton,
New York.
Contact: Beverly Hassell; b_hassell@acs.org;
202-872-4065; American Chemical
Society
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a American
Chemical Society
Publishing date: September 4, 2001
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