Scientific News Health care Oncology FRESH EVIDENCE POINTS TO MARINE BACTERIA AS SOURCE OF ANTI-CANCER DRUG
FRESH EVIDENCE
POINTS TO MARINE BACTERIA AS SOURCE OF ANTI-CANCER DRUG
Researchers at Scripps
Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD),
have produced evidence that bacteria living inside a small marine animal may be
the source of a new drug compound being developed to fight cancer.
The marine invertebrate Bugula neritina, a
brown bryozoan animal with stringy tufts
that look like algae, appears unremarkable and similar to a variety of moss-like
sea creatures. In fact, bryozoans are widely known by boat operators, who
consider them ordinary fouling organisms and often scrape them off their vessels'
hulls.
But their potential may be far from ordinary.
Scientists previously discovered Bugula neritina to be the source of
bryostatins, a family of chemical compounds currently being studied for their
ability to treat a variety of cancers. The anticancer drug Bryostatin 1 can be
extracted from colonies of Bugula neritina.
The new study provides evidence that bacteria
that live inside Bugula neritina, and are passed in larvae from one
generation to the next, are the likely source of the anticancer compound.
"This paper presents a whole series of
experiments from a variety of different directions that provide evidence that
this bacteria may indeed be the agent for producing the drug," said Margo
Haygood, the senior author of the paper appearing in this month's issue of Applied
and Environmental Microbiology.
Through the experiments, Haygood and her
co-authors identified a gene of the type that produces the compound. They also
showed that the gene is expressed solely in the bacteria, called "Candidatus
Endobugula sertula."
The findings pave the way for new studies in
Haygood's laboratory, research that addresses problems historically facing the
development of drugs from the sea.
"Currently there
really isn't a practical way to produce enough bryostatin for people to use.
Even if there were enough of the animals out there, collecting enough would be
environmentally destructive. This is one of the biggest problems in the
development of drugs from marine organisms," said Haygood, an associate
professor in the Marine Biology Research Division and the Center
for Marine Biotechnology and Biomedicine at Scripps.
"There are many cases of these very
interesting and useful compounds that are found in marine invertebrates that are
suspected to be made by bacterial symbionts (organisms living in symbiosis with
another). This work is important because if we can use this experimental system
to unlock the potential of these bryostatin drugs, it can serve as a model for
many, many others."
Haygood's new research is addressing two areas:
Attempting to cultivate and grow the bacteria outside of its natural environment
within Bugula neritina; and attempting to clone the genes that make the
drug and deliver them into an organism that can be more practically produced in
large quantities.
Most anticancer drugs act by killing any rapidly
growing cells, inevitably interfering with the body's normal processes.
Bryostatin 1 "flips a switch" that controls how cells behave in the
body. In the case of leukemia cells, for example, it seems to bring them to
their senses and make them behave like normal blood cells. The drug is now in
clinical trials for use in humans.
CalBioMarine Technologies Inc. of Carlsbad, Calif.,
has signed an exclusive agreement with UCSD to commercialize Haygood's findings
for the eventual commercial supply of bryostatin.
Co-authors
of the paper include Seana Davidson, Scott Allen, Grace Lim, and Christine
Anderson. Davidson is now at the University of Washington. The study was
supported by the California Sea Grant College Program, the National Sea Grant
Technology Program, the National Cancer Institute, CalBioMarine Technologies Inc.,
and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
# # #
SCRIPPS CONTACTS:
Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark, 858/534-3624, scrippsnews@ucsd.edu
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Scripps
Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD)
Publishing date: November 1, 2001
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