Anthrax Inhibitor Counteracts Toxin, May Lead to New Therapeutics
A model of the anthrax toxin molecular structure
displays the enzyme-binding surface in red. (University
of Toronto/Jeremy Mogridge)
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Troy, N.Y. — Researchers from Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute and the University of Toronto have designed a
nanoscale assembly of molecules that successfully counteracts
and inhibits anthrax toxin in animal and laboratory
experiments. The novel approach used to neutralize anthrax
toxin could be applied in designing potent therapeutics for a
variety of pathogens and toxins, according to the
researchers.
Anthrax toxin, secreted by the anthrax bacterium, is made of
proteins and toxic enzymes that bind together to inflict damage
on a host organism. The inhibitor, which is described by the
Rensselaer-Toronto team in the April 23 online edition of the
journal Nature Biotechnology, works by preventing the
assembly of toxic enzyme components, thereby blocking the
formation of fully assembled anthrax toxin and neutralizing its
activity.
The inhibitor protected rats from anthrax toxin in the
study.
“Our eventual goal is to use the inhibitor as a human
therapeutic for anthrax exposure, one that can stop the toxin
from functioning inside the body,” says Ravi Kane, the Merck Associate Professor
of Chemical and Biological Engineering at Rensselaer and a
principal investigator of the project. “Combining the inhibitor
with antibiotic therapy may increase the likelihood of survival
for an infected person.”
The 2001 intentional release of anthrax spores via postal
mail in the United States led to increased research on possible
therapeutics and vaccines to treat toxins that could be used as
biological weapons. The current treatment for anthrax exposure
is antibiotics, but inhalation anthrax still has a fatality
rate of 75 percent even after antibiotics are given, according
to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Antibiotics
slow the progression of infection by targeting the bacteria,
but do not counter the advanced destructive effects of anthrax
toxin in the body.
Anthrax toxin is a polyvalent protein complex in that it
displays multiple copies of identical binding surfaces on the
same structure. The inhibitor designed by the
Rensselaer-Toronto team is also polyvalent and recognizes these
surface patterns on the anthrax toxin molecular structure,
allowing it to bind at multiple sites and become four orders of
magnitude more potent than an inhibitor that binds to a single
site.
“Think about how two Lego blocks snap together. A brick with
four studs can interlock with a brick with four holes. These
bricks will grip together better than if they had only one stud
and one hole,” says Jeremy Mogridge, Canada Research Chair and
assistant professor of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology at
the University of Toronto. “Furthermore, Lego works because the
pattern of studs on one brick matches the pattern of holes on
another.”
Earlier work by other groups has shown that an inhibitor
with a fixed pattern of chemical groups can recognize a protein
with a similar fixed pattern of complementary groups. In this
study, the team demonstrated that a therapeutic inhibitor
displaying random patterns can recognize a target if its
statistical characteristics match those of the toxin target.
According to the researchers, endowing inhibitors with
statistical pattern-matching capabilities is less difficult
than designing inhibitors with fixed structures.
“The pattern matching-based approach used by our research
team to neutralize anthrax toxin should be broadly applicable
in designing potent therapeutics for a variety of pathogens and
toxins, including influenza and HIV,” says Kane.
The researchers tested their pattern-matching strategy by
designing a polyvalent inhibitor for cholera toxin,
demonstrating that this approach also could be used
successfully to enhance the potency of polyvalent inhibitors
directed to this target and, they suggest, others. They note
the work also could be useful for creating specific target
recognition in biological sensors.
The team says their work demonstrates for the first time
that liposome-based polyvalent inhibitors are effective in
animals and they are continuing development on the anthrax
inhibitor through additional animal testing.
The research team is led by Kane and Mogridge. Rensselaer
graduate students and post-doctoral researchers who contributed
to the work include Prakash Rai, Chakradhar Padala, Arundhati
Saraph, Saleem Basha, and Sandesh Kate. University of Toronto
researchers included Vincent Poon and Kevin Tao. Funding for
this research was provided by the National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases of the National Institutes of
Health.
Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies at
Rensselaer
At Rensselaer, faculty and students in diverse academic and
research disciplines are collaborating at the intersection of
the life sciences, the physical sciences, and engineering to
encourage discovery and innovation. Rensselaer’s four
biotechnology research constellations — biocatalysis and
metabolic engineering, functional tissue engineering and
regenerative medicine, biocomputation and bioinformatics, and
integrative systems biology — engage a multidisciplinary mix of
faculty and students focused on the application of engineering
and physical and information sciences to the life sciences.
Ranked among the world’s most advanced research facilities, the
Center
for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies at
Rensselaer provides a state-of-the-art platform for
collaborative research and world-class programs and
symposia.
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Published
April 23,
2006 |
Contact: Tiffany Lohwater
Phone: (518) 276-6542
E-mail: lohwat@rpi.edu |
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