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Ricin cancer therapy tested
Doctors may have found a way of harnessing the destructive power of ricin to
fight cancer without potentially lethal side-effects.
Ricin, extracted from castor beans, is a powerful natural toxin and
considered a potential biological weapon.
Scientists want to use it to kill cancer cells, by joining it to a protein
that binds onto lymphoma cells.
There is no doubt that there is real potential for immunotoxins
Dr David Flavell, University of Southampton
However, some patients given the experimental treatment developed a symptom
called "vascular leak syndrome", which affects blood vessels, particularly
in the lungs.
However, a team from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
believe they have found a way to genetically modify the toxin so that it is
less dangerous to humans - but still as lethal to cancer cells.
They looked at several other proteins known to cause vascular leak syndrome
in humans, examining their genetic structure.
They found certain chemical features were similar in several of these
proteins - suggesting that they might be the reason.
They then engineered ricin toxin which missed out these particular features,
and tested their new toxin on mice.
They found that the GM toxin was just as good at killing tumour cells - but
induced significantly less vascular leak syndrome in the mice.
This in theory should allow the dose of toxin in any future cancer drug to
be increased, making it much more effective against the disease.
Their research was published in the journal Nature Biotechnology.
One team of UK scientists at the University of Southampton is carrying out
similar work in the UK, using a different toxin.
Dr David Flavell, a senior lecturer in cancer sciences at the university, is
helping coordinate early clinical trials giving the drug to children whose
leukaemia has relapsed.
He said: "This is a very interesting piece of research.
"There is no doubt that there is real potential for immunotoxins, probably
as a way of either mopping up cancer cells that may have survived initial
treatment, or allowing doctors to use a lower dose of other chemotherapy
drugs which might be more damaging.
"We're hopeful about our toxin, and we have had no cases of vascular leak
syndrome so far."
Dr Flavell is scientific director of the charity Leukaemia Busters, which
funds the project in the UK.
Source: BBC, 3/03
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