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Morphinefree mutant poppies: novel plants make pharmaceutical starter.


A Tasmanian company has developed a poppy that produces a commercially useful drug precursor instead of full-fledged morphine, and an international research team has now reported how the plant does it.

The top1 mutant of the opium poppy (Papaver.somniferum) came out of a company research effort in 1995, but scientists haven't previously published studies of this mutant, says Philip Larkin of the plant-industry section, in Canberra, of CSIRO CSIRO Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organization (Australia) , Australia's federally funded research agency.

In the top1 mutant, the poppy's natural chemistry has a glitch that stops the normal process of making morphine, which is prized as a drug by itself and as a raw material for opiates Opiates
Analgesic, pain killing drugs, such as heroin and morphine that depress the central nervous system.

Mentioned in: Withdrawal Syndromes
 such as heroin. As a consequence of the synthetic pathway's breakdown, top1 accumulates two intermediate compounds: thebaine thebaine /the·baine/ (the-ba´in) a crystalline, poisonous, and anodyne alkaloid from opium, having properties similar to those of strychnine.

the·ba·ine
n.
 and oripavine.

To make some modern painkillers and addiction treatments, pharmaceutical companies convert morphine back to thebaine and then process it further. Starting with thebaine is more efficient, Larkin says. The Tasmanian drug industry has been using top1 since 1998 for production of buprenorphine, oxycodnne, naloxone naloxone /nal·ox·one/ (nal-ok´son) an opioid antagonist, used as the hydrochloride salt in opioid toxicity, opioid-induced respiratory depression, and hypotension associated with septic shock. , and naltrexone naltrexone /nal·trex·one/ (nal-trek´son) an opioid antagonist used as the hydrochloride salt in treatment of opioid or alcohol abuse.

nal·trex·one
n.
An endorphin and narcotic antagonist.
.

In top1, Larkin and his colleagues have now pinpointed blockages in two arms of the poppy's chemical pathways. The team describes its work in the Sept, 23 Nature.

Peter Facchini of the University-of Calgary, in Alberta, who studies poppy biochemistry', says that for figuring out details of natural morphine synthesis, the new poppy is a "very useful tool."

The Australian island of Tasmania grows some 40 percent of the world's legal poppy product. To create more-desirable varieties, Tony Fist of the company Tasmanian Alkaloids alkaloids,
n alkaline phytochemicals that contain nitrogen in a heterocyclic ring structure. They can have powerful pharmacological effects and are more often used in traditional medicine than in herbal treatments.
 in Westbury treated poppy seeds with a chemical mutagen mutagen: see mutation.
mutagen

Any agent capable of altering a cell's genetic makeup by changing the structure of the hereditary material, DNA. Many forms of electromagnetic radiation (e.g.
. He then screened the seedlings and found the top1 poppy.

The company "must have a set a land speed record for commercialization," say Larkin. As early as 1997, Tasmanian growers turned to the top1 poppy, to sell to pharmaceutical companies.

The researchers gave seedlings radioactively labeled doses of components in the natural morphine pathway. By testing where the radioactivity showed up later in the pathway, the team found the glitch the step that removes a methyl (CHa) group from thebaine and oripavine.

Larkin and Anthony Millgate, also of CSIRO, compared the activity of some 17,000 individual genes in the mutant and the natural poppies. The mutant's activity. fell short for 10 of the genes.

Low-morphine mutants are common, especially for ornamental gardens, Facchini says, but it's rarer to find a mutant that accumulates something useful.

Plant biochemist Vincenzo De Luca of Brock University in St. Catharines, Ontario St. Catharines (2006 population 131,989; metropolitan population 390,317) is the largest city in the Niagara Region and the sixth largest urban area in Ontario, Canada, with 97.11 square kilometres (37.5 sq mi) of land. , says, "The story shows there is still much to be done when it comes to improving medicinal plants."
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:8AUST
Date:Sep 25, 2004
Words:432
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