| More
than one million people die each year from malaria. Even those taking
medicine to avoid the disease may be out of luck—some strains
of malaria parasite are becoming resistant to existing drug treatments.
But there may be new
treatments available in the near future, thanks to the work of a
research team that includes Michael Gelb, UW professor of chemistry,
and Wesley Van Voorhis, UW professor of medicine.
Gelb and Van Voorhis are among a group of scientists who were honored
recently with a Project of the Year Award by the Medicines
for Malaria Venture.
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| Michael
Gelb, third from left, with (from left) Andrew Hamilton, Wesley
Van Voorhis, and David Floyd, honored for their efforts to
develop new treatments for malaria. |
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Gelb’s malaria
research builds on his previous research into proteins. In the early
1990s, he discovered that molecules called prenyl groups anchor
proteins to the membranes in human cells. While the prenyl groups
are essential to the functioning of proteins, one such protein called
Ras causes cancer when it becomes mutated. Drug companies, recognizing
this, have been developing cancer treatments that inhibit prenylation.
At the same time, Gelb’s
lab has been studying parasites that cause malaria and sleeping
sickness. Gelb began to wonder whether those parasites might also
contain proteins with prenyl groups. “We knew that if they
did, there was the potential to piggyback on work already being
done for cancer drugs,” explains Gelb.
Recent genomic information
provided some answers, confirming that malaria parasites contain
protein farnesyl-transferase (PFT)—a protein also found in
human cells, and that attaches prenyl groups to proteins.
With that information,
scientists in Gelb’s lab isolated the PFT from the parasite,
allowing them to test various inhibitors on living parasites as
well as in vitro.
To obtain the inhibitors, Gelb contacted Andrew Hamilton, a colleague
at Yale University who spearheads one of the largest university
efforts to create PFT inhibitors for cancer treatment.
What followed was good
news and bad news. “We could show early on, using Hamilton’s
compounds, that they were quite toxic to these parasites,”
says Gelb. “But those compounds are metabolized in animals
too quickly to be used as drugs. They need to hang around in the
blood for hours, not minutes.”
A more suitable compound
was being made at Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS). David Floyd of BMS
agreed to provide the compound—actually a few hundred compounds
in its PFT inhibitor series—to the UW team. Gelb’s lab
has been synthesizing them for use in testing and Van Voorhis has
been testing them in parasites. “We’re also making new
compounds,” says Gelb, “because we haven’t found
one good enough yet to take into clinical trials.”
Results in mice have
been promising, however. “We now know that we have a compound
that cures malaria in mice,” says Gelb. “We know the
concept is good.”
A major grant from the
Medicines for Malaria Venture, funded in part by the Gates Foundation,
will help fund the next phase of research. Gelb hopes that they
will have a compound suitable for human clinical trials in about
two years.
If the compound is successful, it will be a significant development
in the treatment of malaria.
“Most of the other
antimalarial drugs currently in development are based on existing
treatments for which resistance has cropped up,” says Gelb.
“This is the first new approach in more than a decade.”
[Autumn 2003 - Table of Contents]
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