Chrome 2001
.
The Trusted Source InteliHealth Aetna InteliHealth Aetna InteliHealth
Enter Drug Name . Enter Search Term
     
. .
. .
.
Home
Health Commentaries
InteliHealth Dental
Drug Resource Center
Ask the Expert
Interactive Tools

InteliHealth Policies
Site Map
Diseases & Conditions Healthy Lifestyle Your Health Look It Up
Health News Health News
.
Associated Press

Anthrax Screening System Is Created
July 26, 2002

(The Associated Press) -- In a development that could boost anthrax research, scientists have created a way to rapidly screen thousands of drugs to ferret out those capable of disarming one of the bacteria's deadly toxins.

The screening system devised by Italian researchers has already identified two chemical compounds that inhibit the "lethal factor" protein that anthrax unleashes on the body's immune system.

Those two compounds blocked the toxic effect in mouse cells tested in the laboratory, but have yet to be tried in living animals.

"It's just one step. It's too early to say whether we have anything of use," said Cesare Montecucco, a professor of general pathology at the University of Padua in Italy.

The findings are reported in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature. Scientists in New Jersey have developed a similar system, a Harvard expert said.

Montecucco said his team is collaborating with the Pasteur Institute in Lyon, France, on plans to test the two compounds on anthrax-infected animals.

Other scientists said the screening system's primary importance will be in permitting pharmaceutical companies to quickly scour their vast "drug libraries" for potential anthrax-fighting compounds to aid in the development of defenses against bioterrorism.

"This will allow them to test all the drugs they've created in the past 100 years, and any new ones they're working on, to see if they might block this toxin," said Phil Hanna, a professor of microbiology and immunology at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor.

Automated systems combining robots, computers and special plates lined with rows of tiny wells for experiments have been used for years to quickly test the effect of chemical compounds on cellular structures.

The team's findings come two months after scientists with Merck Research Laboratories of Rahway, N.J., described a similar system, said anthrax researcher R. John Collier at the Harvard Medical School in Boston.

Both systems provide anthrax researchers with a useful new tool in their hunt for ways to disarm anthrax in the wake of last fall's deadly anthrax-by-mail attacks that killed five people, Collier said.

Copyright 2002 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

.
InteliHealth
. . . .
.
More News
InteliHealth .
.
Top News
General Health
This Week In Health
Addiction
Allergy
Alzheimer's
Asthma
Arthritis
Babies
Breast Cancer
Cancer
Caregiving
Cervical Cancer
Children's Health
Cholesterol
Complementary & Alternative Medicine
Dental / Oral Health
Depression
Diabetes
Ear, Nose And Throat
Eyes
Family Health
Fitness
Headache
Heart Health
HIV / AIDS
Infectious Diseases
Lung Cancer
Medications
Men's Health
Mental Health
Nutrition News
Multiple Sclerosis
Nutrition Guide
Parkinson's
Pregnancy
Prevention
Prostate Cancer
Senior Health
Sexual / Reproductive Health
Sleep
Tobacco Cessation
STDs
Stress Reduction
Stroke
Weight Management
Today In Health History
Women's Health
Workplace Health
.
.
.
.
InteliHealth

   
.
.   HONcode
.
Chrome 2001
Chrome 2001