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Compound from Coral Could Combat Cancer - Nature holds treasure trove of 'new' compounds
Scientific American ^ | March 13, 2006 | David Biello

Posted on 03/16/2006 6:31:39 AM PST by S0122017

March 13, 2006

Compound from Coral Could Combat Cancer

Natural compounds have proven to be a treasure trove of medicinal properties. For example, the bark of the Pacific yew tree yielded a compound that has helped battle some forms of cancer. Such finds have led to a new industry--bioprospecting--and such prospectors have fanned out across the globe in search of nature's remedies. Now a compound isolated from coral collected off the coast of Okinawa has shown the ability to slow down and possibly prevent virus replication and it may hold promise as a cancer treatment. Isis hippuris is a yellow, branching coral found in the tropical waters of the western Pacific. By grinding it up and treating it with methanol, researchers isolated a natural steroid, dubbed hippuristanol. Biochemist Jerry Pelletier of McGill University and his colleagues tested this steroid's therapeutic abilities. In vitro and in vivo, the steroid blocked a critical step in the process that allows a virus to thrive.

Antibiotics and other modern medicines do not work on viruses because these radically simple organisms infiltrate cells and hijack their processes to serve their own purposes. Such a hijacker virus uses cellular machinery to control the process of building proteins and thereby replicates itself. Based on the team's research, published online yesterday in Nature Chemical Biology, hippuristanol stops this process by inhibiting the function of a protein--eIF4A--that acts as a molecular motor, which the virus relies on to make proteins. "You can selectively block production of proteins from viral mRNAs that rely more heavily on this factor," Pelletier says. "It's very clean in the way it acts on this protein. It's very selective in its mechanism and it doesn't appear to have off-target effects."

These experiments showed that hippuristanol slowed the replication of poliovirus without stopping protein creation in uninfected cells. And because this process appears to spiral out of control in some cancers, hippuristanol might also prove to be a potent chemotherapy. "Any compound that targets these factors opens up a new therapeutic avenue for cancer," Pelletier notes. The only problem will be ensuring a steady supply of the promising compound without denuding the western Pacific's reefs. --David Biello


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: cancer; compound; coral; ecoping; environment; health; medicine; natural
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To: Spirochete
The photo looks like Pocillipora or Montipora.

It's actually a Gorgonian... the photo is slightly misleading. ;)
21 posted on 03/16/2006 2:49:19 PM PST by Renderofveils (Qur’an 8:39 “So, fight them until all opposition ends and the only religion is Islam.”)
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To: Marine_Uncle

I read something about using electricity to speed up coral growth. They found (and are already applying) low electricity fields around coral, which seems to speed up the growth a lot compared to unaided coral. It may have something to do with calcium deposition.


22 posted on 03/17/2006 2:30:15 AM PST by S0122017
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To: Marine_Uncle

coral farming?


23 posted on 03/17/2006 5:22:50 AM PST by Chanticleer (Let us speak courteously, deal fairly, and keep ourselves armed and ready. T. Roosevelt)
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To: S0122017
"I read something about using electricity to speed up coral growth. They found (and are already applying) low electricity fields around coral, which seems to speed up the growth a lot compared to unaided coral. It may have something to do with calcium deposition."
You could be right on the money.
24 posted on 03/17/2006 11:36:43 AM PST by Marine_Uncle (Honor must be earned)
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To: Chanticleer
"coral farming?"
Yes. I no longer have links to those company web sites. Since then, I had moved and no longer maintain Marine aquariums. Nor the library of Marine funa etc., I had accumulated over a number of years. In short, it is no longer a hobby for me. So I am out of the loop on these type discussions.
25 posted on 03/17/2006 11:39:13 AM PST by Marine_Uncle (Honor must be earned)
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To: neverdem; SunkenCiv; Lil'freeper; cyborg; redhead


26 posted on 03/23/2006 4:32:37 PM PST by Coleus (What were Ted Kennedy & his nephew doing on Good Friday, 1991? Getting drunk and raping women)
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