Medicine from the Sea
From slime to sponges, scientists are plumbing the ocean's depths for new medications to treat cancer, pain and other ailments
- By Kevin Krajick
- Smithsonian.com, May 01, 2004, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
In the United States, a marine-derived drug that has been extensively tested for the treatment of chronic pain is Prialt. It is based on venom from a species of Pacific cone snail, whose poisonous harpoonlike stingers can paralyze and kill fish and humans. At least 30 people have died from conesnail attacks. Biochemist Baldomero Olivera of the University of Utah, who grew up in the Philippines and collected cone-snail shells as a boy, conducted the research leading to the discovery of the drug. He and his colleagues extracted a peptide from the venom of Conus magus (the magician’s cone). “I thought that if these snails were so powerful that they could paralyze the nervous system, smaller doses of the compounds from the venoms might have beneficial effects,” Olivera said. “Cone snails are of exceptional interest because the molecules they make are very small and simple, easily reproducible.” In January, the Irish pharmaceutical firm Élan announced that it had completed advanced trials on Prialt in the United States. The drug, acting on nerve pathways to block pain more effectively than traditional opiates, appears to be 1,000 times more potent than morphine—and, researchers say, lacks morphine’s addictive potential and exhibits a reduced risk of mind-altering side effects. One research subject, a Missouri man in his 30s who had suffered from a rare soft-tissue cancer since he was 5, reported to scientists at the Research Medical Center in Kansas City that his pain had abated within days of receiving Prialt. About 2,000 people have received the drug on an experimental basis; Élan plans to submit the data to the FDA for review and possible approval of Prialt, with a decision expected as early as next year. Other researchers are investigating the potential of cone-snail venoms, the components of which may number up to 50,000, in the treatment of nervous system conditions such as epilepsy and stroke.
Two antiviral drugs already on the market might be said to have been inspired by marine product chemistry: Acyclovir, which treats herpes infections, and AZT, which fights the AIDS virus, HIV. Those drugs can be traced to nucleosidic compounds that chemist Werner Bergmann isolated from a Caribbean sponge, Cryptotheca crypta, in the 1950s. “These are arguably the first marine drugs,” says David Newman.
Marine-derived products other than drugs are already on the market. For example, two essential fatty acids present in human breast milk are also manufactured by a marine microalga, Cryptocodinium cohnii. Infant-formula makers use the algae-derived substances in some products. An enzyme synthesized from microbes found in undersea hydrothermal vents has proved highly effective in decreasing underground oil viscosity—and therefore increasing oil-well yields. Already, automakers are using one compound, based on glues made by the common blue mussel, to improve the adherence of paint; sutureless wound closure and dental fixatives are other possible applications. New varieties of artificial bone grafts, produced from ground-up corals, possess a porosity that precisely mimics that of human bone tissue. Agroup of compounds with anti-inflammatory properties called pseudopterosins have been extracted from a Caribbean gorgonian (a soft coral) and are included in an antiwrinkle cream marketed by Estée Lauder.
With the field of marine products chemistry showing such promise, a new breed of hybrid scientist has emerged: scuba-diving chemists. They generally spend half their time shaking beakers in a lab, the other half scraping strangelooking things off underwater rocks. Jim McClintock, a University of Alabama at Birmingham marine-chemical ecologist, collects bottom-dwellers in the waters off Antarctica. A perhaps unexpected diversity of organisms thrives there, with more than 400 species of sponges alone. To explore that environment, McClintock and his co-investigators have to pry open sea ice eight to ten feet thick with chain saws, drills or even dynamite. They wear 100 pounds or so of diving gear, including special kinds of super-insulated diving suits, known as dry suits, and descend into deep, narrow holes—often with as little as a two-inch clearance in front of their noses. In this hermetic world, the water may appear pitch-black or gloriously illumined, depending on how much snow covers the ice overhead. Leopard seals, 1,000-pound predators that devour penguins and other seals, may demonstrate a hungry interest in the divers. Mc- Clintock recalls seeing a behemoth charging menacingly and surfacing through a crack in the ice to swipe at researchers topside. “I try to stay out of the food chain,” he says. Back at the University of Alabama, McClintock’s colleague, molecular biologist Eric Sorscher, screens Antarctic organisms for compounds; he has identified a few that may be tested for the treatment of cystic fibrosis. The Pennsylvania- based pharmaceutical firm Wyeth recently detected antibiotic and anticancer properties in extracts from Antarctic sponges and tunicates.
Tropical waters pose their own hazards. Bill Gerwick, who refers to the blue-green algae he studies as “pond scum,” says that his specimens prefer the same cloudy bays favored by stinging jellyfish, saltwater crocodiles and sharks. His colleague, Phil Crews, a natural products chemist at the University of California at Santa Cruz, finds people more threatening. In New Guinea in 1999, villagers, fearing that the scientists were invading fishing grounds off their island, attacked Crews with spears and slingshots. Another time, a machine-gun-wielding gang of young Indonesian soldiers boarded Crews’ research vessel and demanded money. “Basically,” Crews says, “we came up with enough cash.”
He has identified more than 800 compounds in tropical sponges. One promising source of cancer-fighting substances are the compounds called bengamides, after Fiji’s Beqa (pronounced “Benga”) Lagoon, where Crews collected the original specimens. Gerwick has isolated a substance he christened kalkitoxin, from an algae collected off the Caribbean island of Curaçao; he says it has potential as a treatment for some neurodegenerative disorders and possibly cancer, as well as pain control.
Technology is opening the deep sea to bioprospecting. In the past, biologists hoping to collect samples from waters as deep as 3,000 feet could do little more than sink trawl nets and hope for the best, says Amy Wright, an organic chemist at Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution in Fort Pierce, Florida. But since 1984, Wright has collected from inside the Johnson-Sea-Link I and II, deep-water submersibles equipped with robotic claws and high-powered vacuums. They have enabled her to gather delicate sea fans and a host of other organisms intact, mainly from the Atlantic and the Caribbean. “It’s always a surprise,” she says. Acompound from a Caribbean sponge, Discodermia, “is now in clinical trials for the treatment of pancreatic and other cancers.”
The deep sea has turned up leads in the quest for oceanic pharmaceuticals. ASan Diego-based biotechnology firm, Diversa, announced two years ago that its scientists had sequenced the genome of Nanoarchaeum equitans, an unusual organism collected from a seafloor vent north of Iceland. The organism, smaller and simpler and with less DNA than any known bacterium, is being studied as a possible minuscule, living factory for the production of marine chemicals. “We can use what we learn from Nanoarchaeota to figure out something very basic: which genes are essential and which we can do without,” says Michiel Noordewier, a researcher at Diversa. “This is the smallest genome ever found.”
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Comments (1)
I am a sport free diver in hawaii and have just come to realize that I could have killed myself by touching the palythoa toxica. I remember during a few diving trips I came across the strange sponge like palythoa toxica. Just being curious i rubbed my fingers all over a huge colony and pressed on the sponge like organism and even stabbed it with my spear spreading it in tiny fragments all around me. i couldve got some in my mouth or in a cut but i guess i was severely lucky to not ingest any and/or not to have any cuts on my hands. Thank you for the information you guys have put up on the net. it can save lives.
Posted by jason valle on August 22,2009 | 04:52 PM
In the may 2004 issue, whjere is the article Rocking the Cradle;Iran's lost city by Andrew Lawler
Posted by Dorothy Meyerink on December 27,2007 | 04:18 PM