 
Medical Use for New Sugar Coated Proteins
09 September 2003
Making sugar coated proteins for use in medicines is a step closer
thanks to a chance discovery by scientists from the London School
of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. The research is presented today,
Tuesday 9 September 2003, by Professor Brendan Wren at the Society
for General Microbiology's meeting at UMIST in Manchester.
"We were trying to find out exactly how a particular bacteria,
Campylobacter jejuni, causes severe diarrhoea," says Professor
Wren, "and discovered that it can also make important sugar
coated molecules called glycoproteins. Glycoproteins are vital
to help us fight off many infectious diseases and some cancers.
When our normal system to make these sugar proteins malfunctions
it can lead to muscular dystrophy or immune system diseases."
Until now the only way to produce glycoproteins for use in drugs
has been to make them in animal cells taken from mammals and then
cloned, which is expensive and technically difficult. No other
known bacteria has the mechanism to make human type glycoproteins,
so this chance discovery in Campylobacter by London scientists
offers the first opportunity to start producing these medicines
in useful quantities.
"Working with researchers from Imperial College, London
and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, we were
able to carry the vital piece of machinery from C. jejuni and
insert it into another bacterium, E. coli - the work horse microbe
used for cloning proteins in industry," says Professor Brendan
Wren, of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
This research opens a path to produce tailor made sugar coated
proteins which will have a broad range of applications in biological
and medical research and in industry.
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