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Heparin Prepared Synthetically Could Replace Animal-Derived Drug
Researchers at Rensselaer and the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill have discovered an alternative way to
produce heparin, a drug commonly used to stop or prevent blood
from clotting. The findings could enable the current supply of
the drug — now extracted from animal organ tissue — to be
replaced or supplemented by the synthetic version. The new
process also can be applied as a tool for drug discovery,
according to the researchers.
Heparin is a complex carbohydrate used to stop or prevent
blood from clotting during medical procedures and treatments
such as kidney dialysis, heart bypass surgery, stent
implantation, indwelling catheters, knee and hip replacements,
and deep vein thrombosis. The annual worldwide sales of heparin
are estimated at $3 billion.
“We have synthetically prepared heparin in quantities large
enough for use in human medical treatments by engineering
recently discovered heparin biosynthetic enzymes,” says Robert Linhardt, the
Ann and John H. Broadbent Jr. ’59 Senior Constellation
Professor of Biocatalysis and Metabolic Engineering at
Rensselaer. “These discoveries will enable us to effectively
replace a variable raw material — heparin derived from
processed animal organs — with a synthetic material — synthetic
heparin — and have the same therapeutic result.”
Researchers at MIT first prepared a synthetic heparin, but,
in amounts of less than 1 microgram, it was insufficient to
treat humans, says Linhardt. One human dose of heparin is
approximately 100 milligrams.
Rensselaer and UNC-Chapel Hill researchers successfully
synthesized hundreds of milligrams of heparin by developing a
large-scale process involving engineered enzymes and co-factor
recycling. The new, scaleable process can be applied to
synthesize other heparin-based structures that regulate cell
growth and may have applications in wound healing or cancer
treatment, according to the researchers. The findings were
reported Dec. 30, 2005, in the Journal of Biological
Chemistry in a paper titled “Enzymatic redesigning of
biological active heparan sulfate.”
The process also can be applied in solid phase synthesis as
a tool for screening lead compounds with heparin-like
structures for drug discovery, according to the researchers.
The findings were published Jan. 13, 2006, in Biochemical
and Biophysical Research Communication in a paper titled
“Enzymatic synthesis of heparin related polysaccharides on
sensor chips: Rapid screening of heparin-protein
interactions.”
The work was supported by the National Institutes of Health
and the American Heart Association. Rensselaer and UNC-Chapel
Hill have jointly filed a provisional patent on the
process.
Linhardt said additional research will seek to scale the
process another million-fold to make it commercially
viable.
Read the full
press release
Published
February 6,
2006
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