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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Fri Dec 30, 2011, 03:20 PM Dec 2011

How Mollusk Blood Could Cure Cancer


The giant keyhole limpet’s hemolymph carries a protein that is the essential component of a new cancer vaccine. Keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) carries oxygen in limpet blood. It is an unusually large protein—near virus size—and contains many epitopes, which trigger our body to produce antibodies. When doctors inject KLH into the human bloodstream, it provokes a powerful immune response. If markers for a certain cancer are attached to KLH, the immune system can be stimulated to attack them. Unlike some synthetic alternatives, KLH is nontoxic. Researchers use the protein in cancer vaccines to “break tolerance,” says Frank Oakes, the CEO of Stellar Biotechnologies, which grows limpets in a business park for aquaculture next to the Pacific Ocean in Port Hueneme, California. “Your body tolerates the cancer cell because the body believes it is a part of you,” he says.

Breaking tolerance can also be used to treat addiction. Down the coast from Stellar’s lot, in La Jolla, scientists at Scripps Research Institute used KLH to make a vaccine that cuts out the euphoric effects of a heroin high. In their experiment, researchers gave addicted rats a cocktail of heroin-like molecules attached to KLH. Like the cancer vaccine, the protein provoked an immune response to suppress the high. Later, given the option to self-administer heroin, most rats stopped using the drug. Human trials are under way for a similar KLH-based vaccine to treat addiction to nicotine and cocaine.

KLH is too big and complicated to synthesize, so giant keyhole limpets still offer the best, most stable supply of the protein. Before extraction, Stellar employees move the limpets to tanks indoors. Researchers use a syringe to extract the limpet’s blood and then isolate KLH using a centrifuge. It takes about 16 weeks before the mollusk has fully recuperated and is ready for its next extraction. Limpets can also be harvested in the wild, but they die during the extraction process. There aren’t enough limpets in the sea to keep up this method.

More than a dozen vaccines that use KLH are in clinical trials, and a treatment for bladder cancer is now approved for use in Europe and Asia. Stellar currently has the capacity to make between one and two kilograms of KLH a year. But if a KLH cancer vaccine is FDA-approved, Oakes says it “will increase demand by orders of magnitude.”

http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2011-11/how-mollusk-blood-could-cause-cancer
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How Mollusk Blood Could Cure Cancer (Original Post) n2doc Dec 2011 OP
This seems to be a very promising MineralMan Dec 2011 #1
Fascinating LeftishBrit Dec 2011 #2
This could be very exciting if it does even just a part of what they hope it can do. Chemisse Dec 2011 #3

MineralMan

(150,658 posts)
1. This seems to be a very promising
Fri Dec 30, 2011, 04:12 PM
Dec 2011

therapy, and demonstrates the importance of preserving our oceans and other resources. Thanks for posting!

Chemisse

(31,294 posts)
3. This could be very exciting if it does even just a part of what they hope it can do.
Fri Dec 30, 2011, 09:13 PM
Dec 2011

It would be so amazing to have our own bodies go after cancer cells. If the different types of cancer cells all have some kind of marker in common, maybe it could eventually lead to a vaccine.


I would be a little concerned about the treatment for addiction. What if the antibodies produced in the mice also attacked endorphins (which have a similar structure to morphine)? The poor addict would no longer have the drug, and would be without natural endorphins as well! Maybe that's why the human trials are trying it just for cocaine and nicotine.

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