Stanford researchers synthesize compound to flush HIV out of hiding
Any hunter will tell you that when your quarry goes into hiding, you have to flush it out to get a good shot at it. Such is the case with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Though antiretroviral "cocktails" can target an active infection, they cannot get at the virus when it retreats inside the host's T cells, where it may lie dormant for decades, waiting for an opportunity to burst forth in a fresh round of infection. What HIV hunters need is a good bird dog.
Now, Stanford chemist Paul Wender and his coworkers have found a way to synthesize better bird dogs, agents that can be tailored to flush HIV out into the open where the immune system and antiretroviral therapies can destroy it. Wender is senior author of a paper about the research in the May 2 issue of Science.
"We're not sure how far this will go, but certainly, from a theoretical point of view, it has promise of taking therapy to the next level-that is, addressing issues related to eradication of the disease, of the virus, at least," said Wender, the Francis W. Bergstrom Professor.
Wender and his co-workers Jung-Min Kee and Jeff Warrington have developed a way to synthesize prostratin and DPP, two compounds that occur naturally in plants, in the laboratory. Prostratin, found in the Mamala plant (Homalanthus nutans) that grows in the Samoan rainforest, has shown promise in previous studies as an activator of dormant HIV. DPP, a molecular relative of prostratin found in resin spurge (Euphorbia resinifera), which grows in arid regions, also has shown potential.
Research has been hampered, though, because the compounds are difficult to obtain, particularly in the quantities needed for practical lab work on their mode of action and therapeutic potential. The yield from both plants is low and highly variable; the availability of the plants is limited; and isolating the compound is difficult. Heavy harvesting of the wild plants, especially in Samoa, also could cause ecological damage.
But synthetic prostratin and DPP, which now can be readily made in the lab, changes that equation.
"We have now minimized, if not eliminated, the issue of availability of prostratin and DPP," Wender said. "But equally, if not more importantly, we have opened access to other compounds that might be similar in structure but superior in function."
Previous work done in mice by researchers at the University of California-Los Angeles indicates that prostratin, used in combination with interleukin-7, an immune system stimulator made in bone marrow, managed to flush out and eliminate approximately 80 percent of the dormant virus. But with HIV, 80-percent efficiency is not enough. Anything less than 100 percent means the virus is still lurking in the T-cells and will spring back to action as soon as an opportunity presents itself.
"Nature has produced these compounds for various reasons in the plants from which they're derived, but certainly not to treat human maladies," Wender said. "They're not optimized for human therapy."
But with synthetic prostratin and DPP available, researchers can take the basic compounds and tinker with the structure and related function. "We could find out how to improve them by reverse engineering: figuring out what is important and what isn't important," Wender said. "We could begin to design and synthesize molecules that would never be found in nature but might actually be therapeutically more beneficial than what has been found thus far."
In the Science paper, Wender and his team detail how both compounds can be synthesized, but also show the initial phase of designing and making new derivative compounds.
Although prostratin has long been used by traditional Samoan healers without their patients experiencing acute side effects, it is possible that undesirable effects could show up in an immune-impaired patient taking prostratin or DPP. But Wender noted that engineering the compounds in a lab would permit scientists to circumvent these problems. "Usually these kinds of side effects are a result of a drug hitting multiple targets. So it hits one target, which is beneficial, but then it hits some other target, too," he said. "But by modifying the structures, you could select for the beneficial activity over the non-beneficial activity."
"It's a little bit like draw poker," Wender said. "The important point is that we're not forced to use the hand we get. We'll get a hand and we'll return a few cards if we don't like it, because we can keep on tuning this until we get it right, so that a royal flush, hopefully, can be realized."
Wender's team developed their method of synthesizing prostratin and DPP by using a renewable resource, croton oil, made from the seeds of a small tree (Croton tiglium) cultivated in Asia. They derived phorbol from the croton oil and then converted it into the structure of prostratin.
The conversion process required some engineering finesse; they had to overcome a hurdle when, by removing an oxygen atom, they triggered a series of anticipated but seemingly undesired changes.
"To the credit of my coworkers, Jung-Min Kee and Jeff Warrington, they employed a strategy that sometimes is missed," Wender said. "Rather than fighting the flow, they went with it." They found a way to redirect the chemical complications into a solution to the problem that proved even better than the route they had initially sought to follow.
"Eventually they produced a shorter, more economical way of connecting our starting material, phorbol, to our target, prostratin," Wender said. The process Kee and Warrington came up with requires only five steps, which is of tremendous importance in making it economically feasible. As Wender pointed out, "steps cost money and human time."
Wender emphasized that the work of his team is the most recent chapter in efforts of a truly global community, starting with the Samoan healers, who willingly shared their knowledge with Paul Cox, an ethnobotanist who saw them prescribing a tea made from Mamala bark for patients with hepatitis-like symptoms. Cox, in turn, sent samples to the National Institutes of Health, in hopes that the bark might have antiviral properties useful in fighting some cancers. Researchers at NIH then analyzed the bark and isolated prostratin.
Prostratin belongs to a class of compounds called tiglianes, many of which promote tumor growth, so it had no initially perceived use in fighting cancer. But NIH researchers found that prostratin was not a tumor promoter and checked to see if perhaps it could help combat HIV, which is when its remarkable ability to flush out the dormant virus was discovered. Significantly, prostratin has also been found to block uptake of the purged virus, offering yet another potentially therapeutic benefit.
"The whole effort is a testimonial to a global community working to deal with what I think is a global, and top priority, problem," Wender said.
Source: Stanford University
Related
- Duke chemists synthesize promising anti-cancer productWed, 20 Aug 2008, 12:42:45 EDT
- Certain HIV treatment less effective when used with anti-TB therapySun, 3 Aug 2008, 14:35:24 EDT
- New approach, old drug show promise against hepatitis C, Stanford research showsSun, 31 Aug 2008, 14:43:00 EDT
- Extraordinary immune cells may hold the key to managing HIVThu, 4 Dec 2008, 13:04:27 EST
- Arsenic-based therapy shown to help eradicate leukemia-initiating cellsMon, 12 May 2008, 11:21:38 EDT
Share
Other sources
- Researchers Synthesize Compound To Flush HIV Out Of Hiding And Into Crosshairsfrom Science DailySat, 3 May 2008, 22:21:03 EDT
- Scientists synthesise compound to flush HIV out of hidingfrom Science CentricSat, 3 May 2008, 11:56:07 EDT
- Researchers synthesize compound to flush HIV out of hidingfrom PhysorgFri, 2 May 2008, 6:14:06 EDT
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Next article
Princeton University survey finds 'pain gap'Previous article
Global warming linked to caribou-calf mortalityLatest breaking news
- Milky Way a swifter spinner, more massive, new measurements showMon, 5 Jan 2009, 13:56:33 EST
- Iowa State astrophysicist helps map the Milky Way's 4 spiral armsMon, 5 Jan 2009, 8:21:22 EST
- Teens frequently mention risky behaviors on social networking sitesMon, 5 Jan 2009, 16:22:18 EST
Popular science news articles
- Evolution in action: Our antibodies take 'evolutionary leaps' to fight microbes
- Milky Way a swifter spinner, more massive, new measurements show
- Iowa State astrophysicist helps map the Milky Way's 4 spiral arms
- Field Museum discovery helps solve mystery of South American trophy heads
- Stars forming just beyond black hole's grasp at galactic center
- Religion may have evolved because of its ability to help people exercise self-control
- Grape-seed extract kills laboratory leukemia cells, proving value of natural compounds
- USC dentist links Fosamax-type drugs to jaw necrosis
- 6 North American sites hold 12,900-year-old nanodiamond-rich soil
- New visualization techniques yield star formation insights
- Evolution in action: Our antibodies take 'evolutionary leaps' to fight microbes
- Uncultured bacteria found in amniotic fluids of women who experience preterm births
- Mothers pass on disease clues to offspring
- Scientists can now differentiate between healthy cells and cancer cells
- 'Recovery coaches' effective in reducing number of babies exposed to drugs
- Religion may have evolved because of its ability to help people exercise self-control
- USC dentist links Fosamax-type drugs to jaw necrosis
- Antioxidants offer pain relief in patients with chronic pancreatitis
- Grape-seed extract kills laboratory leukemia cells, proving value of natural compounds
- Transcendental Meditation reduces ADHD symptoms among students: New study
- Brain starvation as we age appears to trigger Alzheimer's
- Sugar can be addictive, Princeton scientist says
- Facial expressions of emotion are innate, not learned, says new study
- Doctors issue warning about the danger of heavy toilet seats to male toddlers
- MRI brain scans accurate in early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease