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Information for this article was provided
by EurekAlert!
AIDS drug from sunflowers
January 9, 2006 - University of Bonn
Substance could add completely new weapon
to drugs arsenal
Sunflowers can produce a substance which prevents the
AIDS pathogen HIV from reproducing, at least in cell cultures. This is the
result of research carried out by scientists at the University of Bonn in
cooperation with the caesar research centre. For several years now the
hopes for a completely new group of AIDS drugs have been pinned to what is
known as 'DCQA'. However, the substance is only available in very small
quantities and is thus extremely expensive. By using the Bonn method it
could probably be produced for a fraction of the costs. The researchers
have patented their method. Together with the Jülich Research Centre they
now want to attempt to manufacture the substance on a large scale. They
are looking for partners in industry to help them with this.
It all began with a small mould with the tongue-twisting
name sclerotinia sclerotiorum. The pathogen responsible for the dreaded
'white stem rot' can, if the weather conditions are unfavourable, destroy
an entire sunflower crop. However, some sunflowers survive the fungus
attack more or less unscathed. They do this by producing specific
antibodies which eventually put a stop to the fungus.
The agricultural engineer Claudio Cerboncini wanted to
find out what chemical weapons the fungus-resistant sunflowers have at
their disposal. In his PhD thesis for Professor Heide Schnabl of the Bonn
Centre of Molecular Biotechnology (CEMBIO) Claudio infected different
types with their sworn enemy. In this way he was able to isolate the
antitoxins which the plants produce in response to the fungus. Among these
was a substance which is also mentioned in the literature, albeit in a
completely different context: this is dicaffeoyl quinic acid, or DCQA for
short – the highly prized prototype for a new group of AIDS drugs.
One million euros per gram
'Dicaffeoyl quinic acid can prevent the HI virus from
reproducing, at least in cell cultures,' explains Claudio Cerboncini, who
is now working at the caesar research centre. 'It is one of the few
substances known today which inhibit viral integrase – this is an enzyme
which is essential if the pathogen is to reproduce.' In contrast to other
enzymes medical experts expect there to be only a few side-effects from
such integrase inhibitors. In the pharmaceuticals industry they are
therefore seen as the great white hope for a completely new class of AIDS
drugs. Initial clinical tests seem to confirm DCQA's potential.
'We need these substances to expand our arsenal of
effective weapons against the disease,' Dr. Esther Vogt of the
Immunological Out-Patient Service of Bonn University Clinic adds. 'It
remains to be seen, however, whether they will prove to be as effective in
clinical practice as they seem to be at present.'
DCQA occurs in the artichoke and wild chicory, though in
extremely small doses. The market price is therefore currently €1,000 per
milligram. 'We want to attempt to cultivate sunflower cells or other plant
cells in a nutrient solution together with the mould sclerotinia
sclerotiorum and then obtain the enzyme from the liquid,' CEMBIO
researcher Ralf Theisen says. 'If things go according to plan, we could
produce DCQA at a substantially reduced cost.'
From the ceiling of Ralf Theisen's office hangs the
model of a Maxus rocket. As a botanist he is actually doing research on
how plants react to gravity, and therefore recently sent some of his test
objects into space in a rocket like that. 'We are investigating which
genes plants switch on and off under particular gravity conditions,' he
explains. 'However, with the methods we use we can also, for example, find
out which genes the sunflowers activate when they produce DCQA in reaction
to a fungus infection.'
This knowledge would make mass production of DCQA a
distinct possibility. Even now chemists can 'copy' the substance, albeit
only with great difficulty. 'The tricky bit is transferring the caffeoyl
groups to the quinic acid,' Ralf Theisen says. 'The plants probably only
have one enzyme, which acts as a catalyst for this transfer. If we can
find the construction manual for this enzyme, i.e. the corresponding gene,
and can smuggle it into the bacteria, the latter can produce the enzyme in
large quantities. The critical step of synthesis would then be child's
play and could be carried out on an industrial basis by using the
fermentation technology available in Jülich.'
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