Posts Tagged ‘Ocean research’

Told you it’s about the Oceans.

In a previous post, I lamented the way we hyperfocus on space exploration when the oceans on our own planet offer humanity so much. Here’s some more evidence I was right.

 

Cancer-inhibiting Compound Found Under The Sea

ScienceDaily (Aug. 10, 2008) University of Florida College of Pharmacy researchers have discovered a marine compound off the coast of Key Largo that inhibits cancer cell growth in laboratory tests, a finding they hope will fuel the development of new drugs to better battle the disease.

The UF-patented compound, largazole, is derived from cyanobacteria that grow on coral reefs. Researchers, who described results from early studies today (Aug. 7) at an international natural products scientific meeting in Athens, Greece, say it is one of the most promising they’ve found since the college’s marine natural products laboratory was established three years ago.

An initial set of papers in the Journal of the American Chemical Society also has garnered the attention of other scientists, and the lab is racing to complete additional research. The molecule’s natural chemical structure and ability to inhibit cancer cell growth were first described in the journal in February and the laboratory synthesis and description of the molecular basis for its anticancer activity appeared July 2.

“It’s exciting because we’ve found a compound in nature that may one day surpass a currently marketed drug or could become the structural template for rationally designed drugs with improved selectivity,” said Hendrik Luesch, Ph.D., an assistant professor in UF’s department of medicinal chemistry and the study’s principal investigator.

Largazole, discovered and named by Luesch for its Florida location and structural features, seeks out a family of enzymes called histone deacetylase, or HDAC. Overactivity of certain HDACs has been associated with several cancers such as prostate and colon tumors, and inhibiting HDACs can activate tumor-suppressor genes that have been silenced in these cancers.

Although scientists have been probing the depths of the ocean for marine products since the early 1960s, many pharmaceutical companies lost interest before researchers could deliver useful compounds because natural products were considered too costly and time-consuming to research and develop.

Many common medications, from pain relievers to cholesterol-reducing statins, stem from natural products that grow on the earth, but there is literally an ocean of compounds yet to be discovered in our seas. Only 14 marine natural products developed are in clinical trials today, Luesch said, and one drug recently approved in Europe is the first-ever marine-derived anticancer agent.

“Marine study is in its infancy,” said William Fenical, Ph.D., a distinguished professor of oceanography and pharmaceutical sciences at the University of California, San Diego. “The ocean is a genetically distinct environment and the single, most diverse source of new molecules to be discovered.”

The history of pharmacy traces its roots back thousands of years to plants growing on Earth’s continents, used by ancient civilizations for medicinal purposes, Fenical added. Yet only in the past 30 years have scientists begun to explore the organisms in Earth’s oceans, he said. Fewer than 30 labs exist worldwide and research dollars have only become available in the past 15 years.

HDACs are already targeted by a drug approved for cutaneous T-cell lymphoma manufactured by the global pharmaceutical company Merck & Co. Inc. However, UF’s compound does not inhibit all HDACs equally, meaning a largazole-based drug might result in improved therapies and fewer side effects, Luesch said.

Since 2006, Luesch and his team of researchers have screened cyanobacteria provided by collaborator Valerie Paul, Ph.D., head scientist at the Smithsonian Marine Station in Fort Pierce. They check the samples for toxic activity against cancer cells and last year encountered one exceptionally potent extract – the one that ultimately yielded largazole.

To conduct further biological testing on the compound, Luesch and his team have been collaborating with Jiyong Hong, an assistant professor in the department of chemistry at Duke University, to replicate its natural structure and its actions in the laboratory.

Luesch said that within the next few months he plans to study whether largazole reduces or prevents tumor growth in mice.

Luesch has several other antitumor natural products from Atlantic and Pacific cyanobacteria in the pipeline.

“We have only scratched the surface of the chemical diversity in the ocean,” Luesch said. “The opportunities for marine drug discovery are spectacular.”

 

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Charity Begins At Home

According to an article from Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego,

A new large-scale, multidisciplinary ocean exploration program would increase the pace of discovery of new species, ecosystems, energy sources, seafloor features, pharmaceutical products, and artifacts, as well as improve understanding of the role oceans play in climate change, says a new congressionally mandated report from the National Academies’ National Research Council. Such a program should be run by a nonfederal organization and should encourage international participation, added the committee that wrote the report.

At least seventy percent of our planet is covered with water, yet only 2% of our oceans have been explored. I am dumbfounded by the lack of foresight and common sense in both the political sphere and in the scientific community. Who is responsible for dictating what we research? Lauren Mueller, of the Daily Utah Chronicle, said of NASA:

After a $500 million budget cut in 2007 ended in the threat of job losses and program cuts, the space agency requested $17.6 billion for 2009. The budget, which is sure to be reworked by the congressional powers that be, would be a 2.9 percent increase over the fiscal year of 2008, according to Wired magazine.

…With the support of unlikely climate enthusiast President Bush, the budget provides for six new Earth-monitoring satellites…Of course, the president then proposed across-the-board cuts in renewable energy and energy efficiency, so I guess we’re back to square one politically.

The space program, then, will cost $17 billion, and while the exploration of space is fascinating, I feel that life on THIS planet should be the object of our allegiance; especially when there’s still so much to be repaired, and so much to learn and benefit from in the depths of our oceans. We have every reason to believe that Earth seas will provide many things of value, not the least of which is the medicinal breakthroughs we so urgently need, and perhaps more bluntly, learning about Inner Space could lead us to useful solutions for Climate Change, which threatens profound global upset, if not annihilation.

This is another illustration of what I believe to be a lack of understanding about where our priorities should reside. I am a firm believer in the adage that Charity begins at home. Our government’s tendency to be overly concerned about the well -being and the activities of other countries, has led to the decline of well-being in America. What sense does it make for our government to spend $275 million per day to “free Iraq”, not to mention the cost of lives-close to 4,000 U.S. soldiers have died and more than 60,000 more wounded, and over 700,000 Iraqis have been killed while there are another 4 million refugees-all in the name of “bringing” a supposed democracy, freedom, and general well-being to another country, when citizens of America are ignored, starving, homeless, unable to get healthcare, and being taxed into poverty? Before we sink billions of tax dollars and other funds into building another nation, I believe we should build this one.

And what have we to show? A huge and unnecessary death toll in a war that lasted longer than any of the numbskull politicos presumed, and is without merit. Indeed, if America wishes to make this world a better place, it could start by paying attention to climate change, and taking steps to prevent the inevitable catastrophe that looms on that horizon. On a global scale, the money going to the idiocy of war can instead be spent developing things like alternative clean energy sources, providing healthcare for every citizen, education and educational opportunity, and that inimitable research of our oceans, among other things.

I’ll say it again: Charity begins at home.

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