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Cone
Snails and Plants Used to Develop Oral Drug for Pain
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Molecules
from cone snail venom and African plants are being used by
Queensland researchers as a blueprint to develop an oral drug to
treat chronic pain.
Professor David Craik and Dr Richard
Clark from the Institute for Molecular Bioscience have received
$218,275 from the National Health and Medical Research Council
(NHMRC) to aid in translating their research into a product
available for Australians to use.
Studies on the molecule
they have developed have shown that it is effective in relieving
neuropathic pain in animals.
“Neuropathic pain is
one of the most severe forms of chronic pain, and very difficult
to treat,” Dr Clark said.
“Regular pain
occurs when the nervous system is stimulated by, for example, an
injury, whereas neuropathic pain occurs when the nervous system
itself is damaged.”
“Current treatments in
neuropathic pain only provide meaningful relief for one in three
patients, and all of the current market-leading drugs have
serious side effects, as well as taking up to three weeks to
begin to take effect.”
Peptides (small proteins)
from cone snail venom have attracted recent attention from
scientists, as they can target receptors with a high degree of
accuracy, thus eliminating severe side effects.
But
peptides also degrade rapidly in the body. Professor Craik and Dr
Clark have overcome this problem by engineering a circular
peptide, using a circular protein backbone discovered by
Professor Craik and found in plants such as violets.
The
NHMRC Development grant will allow the researchers to further
test their molecule to fully establish its therapeutic potential.
“Successful outcomes from this project will provide
additional confirmation of the suitability of our molecule as a
treatment for neuropathic pain,” Dr Clark said.
“Armed
with these data, we will be able to secure a commercial partner
and develop this molecule into a tablet for sufferers of chronic
pain.”
Image Caption: Cone Snail
Source: University of
Queensland
Permalink:
http://www.sflorg.com/comm_center/unv_science/p385_96.html
Time Stamp: 4/15/2008 at
10:46:40 AM CST
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