|
|
-
- - - - - - - - - - -
by
Janet Howard
Despite
more than 25 years of diving around the world in search of unique marine
creatures, William Fenical was baffled when he came across a strange,
yellow coral growing on an underwater boulder in the Indian Ocean.
"Soft corals just don't
look like that," said the Scripps professor of Marine Chemistry.
"They looked like fingers sticking out all over the rock. I had
no idea what they were when I collected them."
The coral named Eleutherobia
turned out to be a rare species of softcoral that shows great promise
as a potential drug to fight breast and ovarian cancer.
Fenical
discovered Eleutherobia in 1993 while diving off the northwest coast
of Australia. The research team had decided to explore a shallow area
of water known as Bennetts Shoal, which serves as home to a wide
variety of marine life. Finding Bennetts Shoal, however, was not
easy.
"It
was very murky and there were things swimming around all over the
place. You couldnt tell what was going on. Visibility was
only a few feet. |
We eventually
found a guidethis very colorful, aging Aussie bloke, Fenical
said, staring out his office window overlooking the Scripps Pier and
chuckling. He was one of the only guys around there, sort of a
folkloric character out of the middle of the Aussie outback. The guy
was riddled with bullet hole scars and had survived some kind of boat
fire.
While
regaling the team with shark stories, including how one had turned over
his boat, the guide, who went by the name of Pancho, led the crew to
Bennetts Shoal.
He knew how to get to it perfectly, said Fenical. I
dont know how, but he did. So we jumped over and it was a real
spooky place. It was very murky and there were things swimming around
all over the place. You couldnt tell what was going on. Visibility
was only a few feet.
As Fenical approached a large boulder, he noticed some small organisms
that resembled cheese puffs sticking out from the rock.
Ive been working on soft corals for 25 years and I never
saw this species before, he said. I never saw anything like
it.
Recently
patented and licensed to Bristol-Myers Squibb, a chemical called eleutherobin,
extracted from the coral, appears to function similarly to taxol in
preventing cancer cells from dividing. Heralded as a breakthrough treatment
for breast and ovarian cancer, taxol is found in the bark of the Pacific
yew tree. Because extracting the product resulted in the death of the
slow-growing tree, Bristol-Myers Squibb began producing a semisynthetic
version of the drug from a precursor to taxol found in the trees
needles. While it is a potent weapon against cancer, taxol is difficult
to administer and has serious side effects, including immune system
suppression, nausea, and hair loss.
One
of Fenicals students, Thomas Lindel, stumbled across eleutherobins
taxol-like potential while studying the unusual coral in the lab. After
extracting the chemical, Lindel tested it in a standard bioassay used
to determine whether substances show activity against human colon cancer
cells. He was stunned by what he saw. The stuff was so extraordinarily
potent that it was dangerous to handle, said Fenical, director
of the Scripps Center for Marine Biotechnology and Biomedicine. You
could dilute it a million-fold, and it still killed cells very powerfully.
Further tests showed that eleutherobin mimics taxols very unusual
method of blocking cell division. Like taxol, it binds to cellular structures
called microtubules, which are part of the mitotic spindle and play
a key role in cell division. Once eleutherobin has attached to the microtubules,
they become extremely rigid and prevent the cancer cells from dividing.
Taxol is important because it is the only drug discovered that
acts by this very specific mechanism, Fenical said. People
have looked for ten years and rarely found molecules anything like it,
and we just stumbled across it in the middle of this place off the coast
of Australia.
|
 |