Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Shark compound proves potential as drug to treat human viruses, says researcher
21 September 2011 [20:10] - Today.Az
A compound initially isolated from sharks shows potential as a unique
broad-spectrum human antiviral agent, according to a study led by a
Georgetown University Medical Center investigator and reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Early Edition online Sept. 19.
The compound, squalamine, has been in human clinical trials for the
treatment of cancer and several eye disorders, and so has a well-known
safety profile, suggesting it can be quickly tested as a new class of
drugs to treat infections caused by viruses ranging from dengue and
yellow fever to hepatitis B, C, and D. In both lab and animal
experiments, the compound effectively demonstrated antiviral activity
against these human pathogens, some of which cannot now be effectively
treated.
"To realize that squalamine potentially has broad antiviral
properties is immensely exciting, especially since we already know so
much from ongoing studies about its behavior in people," says the
study's lead investigator, Michael Zasloff, M.D., Ph.D., professor of
surgery and pediatrics at Georgetown University Medical Center and
scientific director of the Georgetown Transplant Institute.
Not only does the study offer a promising clinical advance, Zasloff
might have answered the longstanding mystery of how sharks, which have a
very primitive immune system, can so effectively fight the viruses that
plague all living creatures.
"I believe squalamine is one of a family of related compounds that
protects sharks and some other 'primitive' ocean vertebrates, such as
the sea lamprey, from viruses," he says. "Squalamine appears to protect
against viruses that attack the liver and blood tissues, and other
similar compounds that we know exist in the shark likely protect against
respiratory viral infections, and so on.
"We may be able to harness the shark's novel immune system to turn
all of these antiviral compounds into agents that protect humans against
a wide variety of viruses," Zasloff says. "That would be revolutionary.
While many antibacterial agents exist, doctors have few antiviral drugs
to help their patients, and few of those are broadly active."
Zasloff discovered squalamine in 1993 when he was a Professor of
Pediatrics and Genetics at the University of Pennsylvania searching for
novel antibacterial agents. "I was interested in sharks because of their
seemingly primitive but effective immune system. No one could explain
why the shark was so hardy," he says.
After he began to "play" with the compound, he realized that it had
other properties that offered a new direction to treat other disorders.
Zasloff found squalamine inhibited the growth of rapidly growing blood
vessels, such as those found in tumor growth and certain retinal
diseases such as macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy.
Squalamine was subsequently tested in these conditions, and some of
those clinical trials are ongoing.
Since 1995, squalamine has been synthesized in the laboratory, a process that does not involve use of any natural shark tissue.
Over the years, Zasloff remained interested in how squalamine acted
as an immune agent in sharks. He knew that the compound, a natural
cholesterol-like molecule, has a net positive electrical charge. He
later discovered that when it enters cells -- squalamine can access only
certain cells, like those in blood vessels, capillaries, and in the
liver -- it "kicks off" positively-charged proteins that are bound to
the negatively-charged surface of the cell's inner membrane. Some of
these displaced proteins are used by viruses to replicate, and Zasloff
discovered that without those proteins, a virus's life cycle is
disrupted, the microbe is rendered inert, and the cell that contains it
is destroyed.
What most intrigued Zasloff is that squalamine seems so well designed
to fight certain viral infections. "To me, the key to squalamine is
that once in the body it times its action to match the life cycle of
most viruses. Most viruses take hours to complete their life cycle, the
same time period that squalamine renders tissues and organs viral
resistant after administration. In addition, it acts fast to stop viral
replication, clearing the body of these predators within hours," he
says.
"Furthermore, because squalamine acts by making the host's tissues
less receptive for infection, rather than by targeting a specific viral
protein, the emergence of viral resistance would not be anticipated,"
Zasloff adds.
To help prove the potency of squalamine, Zasloff sent the compound to
researchers around the country, including investigators at the
University of California, Los Angeles, Utah State University, the
National Polytechnic Institute of Mexico, Northwestern University,
Eastern Virginia Medical School, Fox Chase Cancer Center, and the
University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston.
In tissue culture studies squalamine was shown to inhibit the
infection of human blood vessel cells by the dengue virus and human
liver cells infected with hepatitis B and D, which can cause liver
failure and cancer.
In animal studies, his collaborators discovered that squalamine
controlled infections of yellow fever, Eastern equine encephalitis
virus, and murine cytomegalovirus, and in some cases cured the animals.
"We have not yet optimized squalamine dosing in any of the animal
models we have studied and as yet we do not know the maximum protective
or therapeutic benefit that can be achieved in these systems," Zasloff
says.
"But we are sufficiently convinced of the promise of squalamine as an
antiviral agent that we intend to take this compound into humans," he
says. "It is clearly a promising drug, and is unlike, in its mechanism
of action and chemical structure, any other substance currently being
investigated to treat viral infections."
Zasloff is the inventor on a patent application that has been filed related to the technology described in this paper. /Science Daily/
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