What are protective effects of anti-ricin A-chain aptamer?December 29, 2008Ricin, a lectin from the castor bean plant Ricinus communis is considered one of the most potent plant toxins. Ricin poisoning can cause severe tissue damage and inflammation and can result in death. Most accidental exposures occur by ingestion of the seeds of castor beans whereby the toxin is released after the seed coat is damaged. The ingested toxin causes severe gastrointestinal damage with symptoms and death due to multiorgan failure or cardiovascular collapse. A research article to be published on November 7, 2008 in the World Journal of Gastroenterology addresses this question. The research team was led by Dr. Kam-Meng Tchou-Wong from New York University School of Medicine in United States. Authors investigated the therapeutic potential of an RNA ligand (aptamer) specific for the catalytic ricin A-chain (RTA), the protective effects of a 31-nucleotide RNA aptamer (31RA), which formed a high affinity complex with RTA, against ricin-induced toxicity in cell-based luciferase translation and cell cytotoxicity assays were evaluated. They have shown that 31RA RNA aptamer can protect against ricin ribotoxicity in cell-based luciferase and cell cytotoxicity assays. Hence, RNA aptamer that inhibits RTA enzymatic activity represents a novel class of nucleic acid inhibitor that has the potential to be developed as a therapeutic agent for the treatment of ricin intoxication. In this report, authors utilized a stable cell-based luciferase assay and showed that 31RA aptamer also neutralized the inhibitory effects of ricin on translation inhibition in cell-free and cell-based luciferase assays and ricin-induced cytotoxicity assay. The use of a stably transfected cell-based luciferase assay will facilitate the development of high throughput screening for inhibitors of ricin as potential antidotes for the treatment of ricin intoxication. World Journal of Gastroenterology |
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| Related Ricin Current Events and Ricin News Articles Argonne researchers develop method that aims to stabilize antibodies Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne National Laboratory have developed a systematic method to improve the stability of antibodies. Green industrial lubricant developed A team of researchers from the University of Huelva has developed an environmentally-friendly lubricating grease based on ricin oil and cellulose derivatives, according to the journal Green Chemistry. NIST researchers 'all aglow' over new test of toxin strength A new National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) assay using a "glow or no glow" technique may soon help the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) defend the nation against a spectrum of biological weapons that could be used in a terrorist attack. Ricin's Deadly Action Revealed by Glowing Probes A new chemical probe can rapidly detect ricin, a deadly poison with no known antidote that is feared to be a potential weapon for terrorists and cannot quickly be identified with currently available tests. Human trial proves ricin vaccine safe, induces neutralizing antibodies; further tests planned cientists have completed the first human clinical trial of a recombinant vaccine for the deadly toxin ricin-a potential bioterror threat - and the results indicate the vaccine is safe and effective in eliciting ricin-neutralizing antibodies. Artificial membranes can reveal biological weapons Today there is a great need for portable equipment that can quickly detect chemical and biological weapons such as nerve gases, viruses, bacteria, and toxins. In a new dissertation the Swedish researcher Inga Gustafsson shows that artificial membranes can be used for this purpose in future biosensors. Biosensors have already proven to be useful in the detection of impurities in food and water, for example. They have also been used in industrial processes, clinical analyses, and the development of pharmaceuticals. In her dissertation, Inga Gustafsson, Department of Chemistry, Ume'å University, and FOI, the Swedish Defence Research Agency , studies artificial membran Shield against assassin`s poison Just a trace of ricin on the sharpened tip of an umbrella was enough to kill the Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov, after an infamous attack on London`s Waterloo Bridge in 1978. Now a vaccine against this lethal toxin could soon be available - and it may be needed. "A big stash of ricin was found in the caves of Afghanistan," says Ellen Vitetta of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, whose team developed the vaccine. "They weren`t collecting it to make stew." Ricin, a natural toxin found in castor beans, is cheap and relatively easy to produce. And as it`s a powder, it is easily turned into an aerosol that can be inhaled. Nor does it take much to kill someone: just The Biochemist February 2002 issue; THEME: Pretty poisonous Introduction - The darker end of the spectrum The 'pretty poisonous' entities that are the subject of this issue of The Biochemist have a much darker side - they might be subject to misuse by those with malevolent intent. Toxins and bioregulators have certainly been considered and developed as weapons by some. In the late 20th Century, third-generation biological warfare programmes, such as in the former Soviet Union, used genetic engineering to modify classical agents. Could the knowledge gained by the genomics revolution be misused? An essential factor in preventing this, says Professor Malcolm Dando (Professor of International Security), is that scientists become much more aware of, and c BBSRC announces its new ROPA awards The Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) has announced its 1998 round of Realising Our Potential Awards (ROPAs). BBSRC is making 40 awards under the updated scheme in which awards can be made across all areas of research in each Research Council. The full list of BBSRC awards appears on pp10-11 of the current issue of bbsrc business. Projects of particular interest include: 1. Improving salt tolerance in plants Usually plants will not grow very well in salty conditions. By understanding how plants cope with excess salt scientists may be able to modify them to grow better in adverse saline conditions. This could have significant implications for increased crop prod More Ricin Current Events and Ricin News Articles |
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