- The Only Supplement That Support Neurological Functions!
Jim Olson,
a pediatric neuro-oncologist at Seattle Children’s Hospital, was
reviewing with his colleagues the case of a 17-year-old girl several
years ago who had just undergone brain surgery to remove a tumor. An MRI
scan revealed a thumb-size piece of tumor left behind. In the operating
room, the tumor tissue had looked just like healthy brain tissue.
During the review meeting, the hospitals’ chief of neurosurgery turned
to Olson and said: “Jim, you have to come up with a way to light these
cells up.”
So Olson and a neurosurgical resident started searching for a way to
highlight cancer cells in the operating room. Eventually, they came
across a report of a scorpion toxin that binds to brain tumors but not
healthy cells. By linking a synthetic version of this protein to a
molecule that glows in near-infrared light, the researchers think they
may have found what they call “tumor paint.”
In their very first test, the pair injected the compound into the
tail vein of a mouse whose body harbored a transplanted human tumor.
“Within 15 to 20 minutes, the tumor started to glow, bright and distinct
from the rest of the mouse,” says Olson.
A Seattle company called Blaze Bioscience has licensed the technology from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center. Olson says human trials will begin late in 2013.
The scorpion toxin is special not only because it binds to tumor
cells, but because it can cross the blood-brain barrier—a cellular and
molecular fortification that lines blood vessels in the brain and
prevents most compounds from entering.
“Usually, peptides don’t get into the brain unless they bind to something specific that carries it in there,” says Harald Sontheimer,
a neurobiologist at the University of Alabama in Birmingham, who first
identified the neurological potential of the scorpion protein.
Although derived from venom, the toxin seems to be safe. A biotech
company started by Sontheimer showed in early clinical trials that a
version of the scorpion toxin tagged with radioactive iodine was safe in
patients. However, the company closed before late-stage testing of the
iodine-tagged compound, which is now owned by Japanese pharmaceutical
company Eisai.
The tumor paint developed by Olson may also light up cancer outside
of the brain. Animal studies suggest it could also demarcate prostate,
colon, breast, and other tumors. The potential the compound has to save
healthy brain tissue and improve patients’ lives is told in a short film
called Bringing Light, which is in the running for the Sundance Film Festival.
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