Ancient Chinese medicine's
anti cancer properties
Medical News Today, UK - Oct
14, 2004
A group of promising cancer-fighting compounds
derived from a substance used in ancient Chinese medicine
will be developed for potential use in humans, the University
of Washington announced today.
The UW TechTransfer Office has signed a licensing agreement with Chongqing
Holley Holdings, a Chinese company, and Holley Pharmaceuticals, its U.S. subsidiary.
The compounds, all developed through the research of UW scientists Henry Lai
and Narendra Singh of the Department of Bioengineering and Tomikazu Sasaki
of the Department of Chemistry, make use of a substance known as artemisinin,
found in the wormwood plant and used throughout Asia since ancient times to
treat malaria.
Although the compounds are promising, potential medical applications are still
years away, officials say.
"We are very excited about the UW's discovery and an opportunity to develop
an artemisinin-based cancer drug," Kevin Mak, chief scientist at Holley,
said. "The technology is very promising, but it's in its early stages. Further
research and clinical trials are needed."
The company, located in Chongqing, China, has been in the artemisinin business
for more than 30 years, and is a world leader in farming, extracting and manufacturing
artemisinin, its derivatives and artemisinin-based anti-malaria drugs, officials
say.
Lai said he became interested in artemisinin about 10 years ago. The chemical
helps control malaria because
it reacts with the high iron concentrations found in the single-cell malaria parasite.
When artemisinin comes into contact with iron, a chemical reaction ensues,
spawning charged atoms that chemists call "free radicals." The free
radicals attack the cell membrane and other molecules, breaking it apart and
killing the parasite.
Lai said he began to wonder if the process might work with cancer, too.
"Cancer cells need a lot of iron to replicate DNA when they divide," Lai
explained. "As a result, cancer cells have much higher iron concentrations
than normal cells. When we began to understand how artemisinin worked, I started
wondering if we could use that knowledge to target cancer cells."
Perhaps the most promising of the methods licensed involves the use of transferrin,
to which the researchers bind artemisinin at the molecular level. Transferrin
is an iron-carrying protein found in blood, and is transported into cells via
transferrin receptors on a cell's surface.
Iron-hungry cancer cells typically have significantly more transferrin receptors
on their surface than normal cells, which allows them to take in more of the
iron-carrying protein. That, according to Lai, is what seems to make the compound
so effective.
"We call it a Trojan horse because a cancer cell recognizes transferrin
as a natural, harmless protein and picks up the tagged compound without knowing
that a bomb - artemisinin - is hidden inside."
Once inside the cancer cell, the iron is released and reacts with the artemisinin.
That makes the compound both highly toxic and, because of cancer's rapacious
need for iron, highly selective. Surrounding, healthy cells are essentially
undamaged.
"Our research in the lab indicated that the artemisinin-tagged transferrin
was 34,000 times more effective in selecting and killing the cancer cells than
normal cells," Lai said. "Artemisinin alone is 100 times more effective,
so we've greatly enhanced the selectivity."
For more information, contact Lai at 206-543-1071 or hlai@u.washington.edu.
The Holley contact is Michael Liu, 714-606-8415 or michael@holleypharma.com.
Contact: Rob Harrill
rharrill@u.washington.edu
206-543-2580
University of Washington