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Chemical Neutralizes Anthrax Toxin.


Scientists have created a synthetic compound that disables the toxin that makes the bacterial disease anthrax so lethal. Meanwhile, another research team has discovered a gene that protects some mice against anthrax. These findings could lead to an antidote to the anthrax toxin and help clarify the mechanism by which it kills.

Whether the new compound can serve as an antitoxin antitoxin, any of a group of antibodies formed in the body as a response to the introduction of poisonous products, or toxins. By introducing small amounts of a specific toxin into the healthy body, it is possible to stimulate the production of antitoxin so that the  in people remains unclear since the scientists have tested it only in rats, says R. John Collier of Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts.  in Boston. Nevertheless, the concept of neutralizing anthrax toxin has appeal because the current treatments, which target the bacterium, and the vaccine now in use have drawbacks.

When a person inhales spores of Bacillus anthracis--the microbe microbe /mi·crobe/ (mi´krob) a microorganism, especially a pathogenic one such as a bacterium, protozoan, or fungus.micro´bialmicro´bic

mi·crobe
n.
 that causes anthrax--they unleash three proteins that combine to form a toxin. This triad makes blood pressure plummet, causes hemorrhaging, and can lead to coma and death.

The proteins attack human cells as a team. One protein--protective antigen (PA)--binds to a receptor on the cell surface and is cleaved cleaved (klevd) split or separated, as by cutting.  by enzymes there. The part of PA that remains stuck, called PA63, provides a docking site for the

other anthrax proteins--lethal factor and edema edema (ĭdē`mə), abnormal accumulation of fluid in the body tissues or in the body cavities causing swelling or distention of the affected parts.  factor. Once assembled, the toxin enables lethal factor to enter the cell. There, it chops up proteins, setting into motion the chain of events that leads to anthrax's symptoms, says Nicholas C. Duesbery of the Van Andel Research Institute in Grand Rapids, Mich.

Since no drug in use at present disables the toxin, Collier and his colleagues set out to create such a compound. First, they identified a peptide, or partial protein, that bonds to PA63 in lab tests. Next, they linked together multiple copies of the peptide. In test tubes, this synthetic molecule, which they call polyvalent polyvalent /poly·va·lent/ (-va´lent) multivalent.

pol·y·va·lent
adj.
1. Acting against or interacting with more than one kind of antigen, antibody, toxin, or microorganism.

2.
 inhibitor (PVI See Present Value Index. ), prevented the natural anthrax proteins from binding to PA63.

When injected into rats, PVI protected the animals against subsequent exposure to 10 times the normally lethal dose of anthrax toxin, the researchers report in the October NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY. Without PVI treatment, rats died within hours.

Antibiotics can kill B. anthracis but have no effect on the toxin already present in the body when symptoms appear, says Robert C. Liddington of the Burnham Institute in La Jolla, Calif. The vaccine poses problems, too. It can cause side effects, and "it's hard to justify vaccinating a whole country against one particular agent of biological terrorism," he says.

Ideally, a toxin antidote would be mass-produced and kept in storage around the country, Collier says.

Researchers are currently charting the anthrax proteins' course in the body. In the Oct. 2 CURRENT BIOLOGY, William F. Dietrich of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Howard Hughes Medical Institute, (HHMI), nonprofit medical research organization founded in 1953 by Howard Hughes and largly funded from proceeds of the 1984–85 sale of Hughes Aircraft. Headquartered in Chevy Chase, Md.  and Harvard Medical School in Boston and his colleagues report that certain variations of a gene called Kif kif   also kef
n.
1. Smoking material, such as Indian hemp, used especially in the Maghreb.

2. The euphoria caused by smoking this material.
1C, which encodes a protein that ushers other proteins around inside cells, protect mice from the effects of the anthrax toxin.

"We've got the PA63 molecular activity on one end and the disease on the other end. The Kif1C gene gives us some clues as to where to look in between," Duesbery says.
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Title Annotation:polyvalent inhibitor
Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 6, 2001
Words:509
Previous Article:Letters.
Next Article:Molecules get microscopic bar code labels.
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