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Potential New Medicines show promise for
treating Colon Cancer, Asthma
March 30, 2011-- In what they described as the opening of a
new era in the development of potentially
life-saving new drugs, scientists today
reported discovery of a way to tone down an
overactive gene involved in colon cancer and
block a key protein involved in asthma
attacks.
Those targets long had ranked among hundreds of thousands
that many scientists considered to be “undruggable,”
meaning that efforts to reach them with
conventional medicines were doomed to fail.
“These substances represent an entirely new class of
potential drugs,” study leader Gregory
Verdine, Ph.D., told the 241st National
Meeting & Exposition of the American
Chemical Society, being held here this week.
“They herald a new era in the drug-discovery
world.”
Verdine cited estimates that conventional medicines, most
of which belong to a family termed “small
molecules,” cannot have any effect on 80-90
percent of the proteins in the body known to
be key players in disease. Throwing up their
hands in frustration, scientists had even
begun to term these prime targets for
battling disease as “untouchables” and “undruggable.”
The new substances are not small molecules, but “stapled
peptides,” named because they consist of
protein fragments termed peptides outfitted
with chemical braces or “staples.” The
stapling gives peptides a stronger, more
stable architecture and the ability to work
in ways useful in fighting disease.
“Our new stapled peptides can overcome the shortcomings of
drugs of the past and target proteins in the
body that were once thought to be
undruggable,” Verdine said. “They are a
genuinely new frontier in medicine.”
In one advance, Verdine and colleagues at Harvard
University described development of the
first stapled peptides that target colon
cancer and asthma attacks.
The colon cancer
stapled peptides inhibit activity of a
protein called beta-catenin that, when
present in a hyperactive form, causes cells
to grow in an aggressive and uncontrolled
way. That protein normally helps keep
certain cells, including those lining the
colon, in good health. But the abnormal
protein has been directly linked with an
increased risk of colon cancer and other
types of cancer, including those of the
skin, brain, and ovaries.
When added to human colon cancer cells growing in
laboratory cultures, the stapled peptides
reduced the activity of beta-catenin by 50
percent. In patients, that level of
reduction could be sufficient to have a
beneficial impact on the disease, Verdine
suggested.
Verdine also reported development of the first stapled
cytokines, which show promise for fighting
asthma. Cytokines are hormone-like proteins
secreted by cells of the immune system and
other body systems that help orchestrate the
exchange of signals between cells. The
stapled cytokines moderate the activity of a
cytokine called interleukin-13, which asthma
patients produce in abnormally large amounts
that contribute to asthma attacks.
Current asthma drugs, he noted, tend to treat the
underlying symptoms of asthma, particularly
inflammation. By contrast, stapled cytokines
could treat the underlying causes of the
disease. Verdine’s team is collaborating
with a pharmaceutical firm on efforts to
further develop the stapled peptides.
The American Chemical Society is a non-profit organization
chartered by the U.S. Congress. With more
than 163,000 members, ACS is the world’s
largest scientific society and a global
leader in providing access to
chemistry-related research through its
multiple databases, peer-reviewed journals
and scientific conferences. Its main offices
are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.
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