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Cancer researchers stumble on a ricin treatment (Good news, if true)
PopularScience ^
| Apr. 2003
| Harald Franzen
Posted on 04/16/2003 12:00:15 AM PDT by Diddley
How easy is it to make ricin poison? "You just get a bunch of castor beans and grind them up," says immunologist Ellen Vitetta of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. Stockpiles were recently discovered in Afghan caves used by al Qaeda; Iraq is also known to have supplies.
Scientists have worked for years to find a vaccine (the poison is so hard to recognize in its victims that an antidote would be impractical) but without successuntil Vitetta and colleagues came upon it.
The poison is best known for its role in a notorious cold war espionage murder. In 1978 Georgi Markova Bulgarian dissident who had left his country a few years earlierwas on his way to work at the BBC in London when he felt a stinging pain in the back of his right thigh. Markov turned and saw a man picking up an umbrella from the street; the man apologized and walked away.
But the pain in Markov's thigh increased, and that night he developed a high fever. Three days later, he was dead. An autopsy revealed that a tiny amount of ricin had been delivered by means of a pellet, likely shot into Markov's thigh with a weapon disguised as an umbrella.
Recently, Vitetta was using ricin poison in her search for a cancer drug. "We were attaching a part of the ricin toxin to antibodies directed against tumors," she says. "You could say the antibody was the delivery system for a warhead and the warhead was the toxin." There were side effects to the treatment, but Vitetta and colleagues were able to eliminate them through genetic engineering of the toxin.
Then it occurred to them: Because they were able to eliminate the side effect, they could probably eliminate the toxicity as well, thus producing a vaccine for the poison.
Initial tests in animals have proven safe and effective, and Vitetta estimates that a drug could be available in a few years.
TOPICS: News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: ricin; ricinresearch; ricinvacine
They said that
they were able to eliminate side effects through genetic engineering of the toxin. Then it occurred to them: Because they were able to eliminate the side effect, they could probably eliminate the toxicity as well, thus producing a vaccine for the poison I don't understand if they are implying that the vaccine would genetically engineer the toxin?
1
posted on
04/16/2003 12:00:15 AM PDT
by
Diddley
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2
posted on
04/16/2003 12:02:06 AM PDT
by
Support Free Republic
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To: Diddley
No, they genetically engineer the vaccine to detect the poison and attack it with antibodies etc. IMHO.
They just realized they could engineer a vaccine without the toxic aspect because of their experience with the silver bullet sort of thing using ricin's toxic effects on cancer cells.
3
posted on
04/16/2003 12:04:28 AM PDT
by
Quix
(QUALITY RESRCH STDY BTWN BK WAR N PEACE VS BIBLE RE BIBLE CODES AT MAR BIBLECODESDIGEST.COM)
To: Quix
. . . and colleagues were able to eliminate them through genetic engineering of the toxin. Then it occurred to them: Because they were able to eliminate the side effect, they could probably eliminate the toxicity as well, thus producing a vaccine for the poison Aha! That makes sense. Thanks.
4
posted on
04/16/2003 12:09:40 AM PDT
by
Diddley
(Growing older is mandatory; growing up is optional.)
To: Diddley
Comment 4 should have read:
. . . they genetically engineer the vaccine to detect the poison and attack it with antibodies etc.
Aha! That makes sense. Thanks.
5
posted on
04/16/2003 12:12:09 AM PDT
by
Diddley
(Growing older is mandatory; growing up is optional.)
To: Diddley
Ooh...pretty slick! Sounds like it has potential.
To: Diddley
So that's what those guys at Ansar al-Islam were working on. That Bush, he destroyed people who were working on curing cancer. What a horrible thing to do. They weren't terrorists, they were humanitarians. Somebody better tell Janeane Garofalo about this.
7
posted on
04/16/2003 1:52:44 AM PDT
by
laz17
(Socialism is the religion of the atheist.)
To: Quix
Castor beans are known as "The Palm of Christ," palma christa, in spanish. In folklore, believed to help cancer...
8
posted on
04/16/2003 3:56:30 AM PDT
by
Ff--150
(The just shall live by faith)
To: Diddley
Bu Xieh--You're welcome.
Thanks for your kind msgs.
9
posted on
04/16/2003 10:13:54 AM PDT
by
Quix
(QUALITY RESRCH STDY BTWN BK WAR N PEACE VS BIBLE RE BIBLE CODES AT MAR BIBLECODESDIGEST.COM)
To: Ff--150
Interesting.
Thanks.
10
posted on
04/16/2003 10:14:35 AM PDT
by
Quix
(QUALITY RESRCH STDY BTWN BK WAR N PEACE VS BIBLE RE BIBLE CODES AT MAR BIBLECODESDIGEST.COM)
To: goody2shooz
Ooh...pretty slick! Sounds like it has potential Serendipity?
11
posted on
04/16/2003 10:32:12 AM PDT
by
Diddley
(Growing older is mandatory; growing up is optional.)
To: Ff--150
I love how all these "new" discoveries are rooted in history.
12
posted on
04/17/2003 5:34:50 PM PDT
by
norraad
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