Plants engineered to produce new drugs
November 4th, 2010 - 2:56 pm ICT by ANILondon, Nov 4 (ANI): By genetically engineering plants to produce unnatural variants of their usual products, MIT chemists have discovered a new way to expand plants’ pharmaceutical repertoire.
The researchers, led by Associate Professor Sarah O’Connor, have added bacterial genes to the periwinkle plant, enabling it to attach halogens such as chlorine or bromine to a class of compounds called alkaloids that the plant normally produces.
Many alkaloids have pharmaceutical properties, and halogens, which are often added to antibiotics and other drugs, can make medicines more effective or last longer in the body.
The team’s primary target, an alkaloid called vinblastine, is commonly used to treat cancers such as Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
O’Connor sees vinblastine and other drugs made by plants as scaffolds that she can modify in a variety of ways to enhance their effectiveness.
“We’re trying to use plant biosynthetic mechanisms to easily make a whole range of different iterations of natural products,” she said.
“If you tweak the structure of natural products, very often you get different or improved biological and pharmacological activity,” O’Connor added.
The study has been published in the Nov. 3 online edition of Nature. (ANI)
- Madagascar periwinkle engineered to produce anti-cancer compound - Jan 20, 2009
- Scientists engineer plant cells to churn out anti-cancer compound - Jan 19, 2009
- New drug type developed to kill lymphoma cells - May 11, 2010
- India, China making inroads in biotech drugs: NYT - Sep 19, 2011
- Dead Sea air filled with high levels of oxidized Mercury - Nov 30, 2010
- Oz teacher stood down for using sticky-tape as punishment - Nov 12, 2010
- Genetically engineered yeast may help revolutionise painkillers research - Aug 11, 2008
- Sinead O'Connor shows off her new look - Jul 07, 2011
- Weight training safe and beneficial for pregnant women - Mar 26, 2011
- Sinead O'Connor tweets about her suicidal tendencies - Sep 20, 2011
- Scientists create jewel-toned organic phosphorescent crystals - Feb 15, 2011
- 100mn-year-old cat-like croc fossil found in East Africa - Aug 05, 2010
- O'connor's marriage back on track - Jan 31, 2012
- Sinead O'Connor splits with husband - Dec 28, 2011
- Maria Sharapova's engagement ring costs $250K - Oct 26, 2010
Tags: alkaloid, alkaloids, antibiotics, bacterial genes, bromine, cancers, chemists, chlorine, halogens, hodgkin s lymphoma, iterations, lymphoma, new drugs, periwinkle plant, pharmaceutical properties, pharmacological activity, primary target, sarah o connor, scaffolds, vinblastine