Guest guest Posted January 10, 2006 Report Share Posted January 10, 2006 Drug firms, scientists go back to nature By PETER LANDERS, The Wall Street Journal Tuesday, January 10, 2006 1:11 AM PST http://www.napavalleyregister.com/articles/2006/01/10/business/storie s_from_ap/iq_3247116.txt TOKYO -- It took two years and thousands of moldy broths for Akira Endo to find something that reduces cholesterol. His breakthrough, drawn from a mold like one that grows on oranges, turned out to be the first in a class of medicines that today bring $25 billion a year to pharmaceutical companies. Dr. Endo's 1973 discovery of the first anticholesterol statin has been relegated to obscurity. Yet the feat spotlights a long- denigrated craft now experiencing a revival: the discovery of drugs from nature's treasure chest. The fungal byproduct that Dr. Endo originally discovered shares the same basic chemical structure as three of the biggest-selling anticholesterol drugs: Zocor, Pravachol and Mevacor. Millions of people have taken these drugs to lower their heart-attack risk. " Whenever we have started with the natural molecule, we have been building on three billion years of natural selection, " says Sir Black, who developed the first beta blocker for heart conditions and the antiulcer drug Tagamet at British pharmaceutical companies in the 1960s and 1970s. For much of the past 15 years, the pharmaceutical industry was " in no mood to be sympathetic to these views, " says Sir , who is 81 and still active in drug discovery. Companies jumped on trendy areas such as synthesizing and testing thousands of artificial chemicals unknown in nature. More recently, they have tried to use the decoding of the human genome to figure out the root causes of diseases and discover cures. For the most part, those efforts have yet to pan out. Just 20 new drugs were approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2005. Several top drug companies are facing flat revenue and declining profits, including Pfizer Inc. and Merck & Co., the two companies that have profited most from statins. Many drug companies scaled down or eliminated divisions focusing on natural products starting in the 1990s. In 2001, Merck closed its natural-products drug discovery department, though it still does some research in the area. In early 2003, Eli Lilly & Co. transferred its library of natural products to a small company in Albany, New York. But now, in some corners, natural products are returning to fashion. One of the biggest hopes for multiple-sclerosis patients, a Novartis AG drug now in large clinical trials, is derived from a chemical found by Japanese scientists in a fungus called the vegetable cicada. Drugs derived from chemicals in sea squirts, Gila monsters and vampire bats now are in large-scale testing or recently came on the market. " The ball is turning. What was fashionable in the past few years hasn't delivered, " says Ian Paterson, a University of Cambridge specialist in natural products who consults for drug companies. The story of Dr. Endo's discovery shows the power of this approach and how it led to one of medicine's biggest groups of blockbusters. It also is a reminder that developing drugs was easier in a day when there were fewer limits on testing in humans. Dr. Endo, now 72 years old, was born on a farm in the snowy north of Japan and recalls being taught by his grandfather about the fungi that grew there. He was fascinated by one poisonous mushroom that kills flies but not people, marveling that a natural substance could have such a subtle effect. He came of age in an era of excitement about revolutionary drugs from natural products to treat infections. Penicillin, a chemical produced by a mold to kill bacteria, was discovered accidentally by Fleming in 1928. He had let lab plates containing bacteria sit during a vacation. He returned to discover that mold had grown in one plate and the mold had a bacteria-free area around it. Penicillin was first mass-produced during World War II and has saved millions of lives. After the war a new miracle cure arrived, this time for tuberculosis. The drug streptomycin was developed by Rutgers University scientists who systematically examined microorganisms in soil. Dr. Endo joined the Tokyo pharmaceutical company Sankyo Co. after college, researching food ingredients. He says he searched through 250 kinds of fungus to find one that produced an enzyme to make fruit juice less pulpy. The product was a hit, and in 1966 the company let Dr. Endo go to Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York to pursue his interest in cholesterol research. At the time, cholesterol was a hot area for ambitious scientists and the U.S. media was reporting evidence that it played a role in heart disease. Dr. Endo says he was surprised to see the attention Americans paid to diet. " I thought it was really strange that people would cut off the fat before eating their steak, " he recalls. " This was a culture shock, something inconceivable in Japan. " There already were anticholesterol drugs, such as clofibrate, but they had problematic side effects. Several companies had recognized that blocking a crucial enzyme in the body's production of cholesterol, called HMG CoA reductase, could be the key to a better drug. But they couldn't find a substance with this mechanism that worked in living animals, says Steinberg, an emeritus professor at the University of California in San Diego who was involved in early cholesterol research. Dr. Endo, with his unusual background, hit upon an idea: Search for something in fungi that would block the enzyme. He knew the penicillin and streptomycin stories well, and in college he had devoured a Japanese translation of a Fleming biography. Dr. Endo knew that bacteria, like humans, need cholesterol to keep their cell walls together. He reasoned that some fungus probably had evolved a substance that would knock out the enzyme as a way of depriving enemy bacteria of cholesterol and killing them. Now it was a matter of finding the right fungus. Dr. Endo persuaded Sankyo to give him help: Masao Kuroda, a chemist who had just joined the company, and two lab assistants. In April 1971 they set to work, brewing fungal broths and testing each for its ability to block the enzyme, a supply of which they got from pulverized rat livers. " It was a bet, just like the lottery, " Dr. Endo says. For more than two years, he and his team worked into the night at their lab next to a train depot in southern Tokyo. " We were doing grunt work every day until we got sick of it, " he recalls. Some chemicals blocked the enzyme well but were rejected because they were toxic. After testing 6,000 fungal broths, they found the right one in August 1973. A substance made by a mold called Penicillium citrinum, similar to the mold that grows on old oranges, produced a potent inhibitor of the enzyme that helps the body make cholesterol. It was the first statin. Dr. Endo almost immediately ran into a problem: The substance, soon to be dubbed compactin, barely worked in rats. Later research would reveal that rats differ in how they make cholesterol, but Dr. Endo was stymied until he happened to meet a colleague at a hangout near the labs one night. The colleague offered some hens for testing, saying they were about to be destroyed. The substance worked in hens. The scientific successes were followed by dissension among Dr. Endo and his colleagues. As he tells it, Sankyo's brass was unenthusiastic about his discovery because there was no precedent for it. They preferred to develop refinements of then-existing cholesterol drugs, he says. A Sankyo spokesman says it is common for a company to hedge its bets by pursuing research on multiple tracks. With the support only of his boss at the research labs, Dr. Endo embarked on a secret experiment at Osaka University. A doctor at the university hospital named Akira Yamamoto was treating patients who had extremely high cholesterol because of a genetic defect. Dr. Endo recalls phoning Dr. Yamamoto from home at night so colleagues didn't learn about the experiment. He personally prepared the samples of the drug and carried them to Osaka. Nowadays such a trial would require permission from the Japanese equivalent of the FDA, but that step wasn't necessary at the time. The first patient in the world to receive a statin, an 18-year-old woman, also was the first to suffer a side effect that occasionally occurs with statins: muscle pain. Because Dr. Yamamoto had given her an extremely high dose, she became so weak she was unable to walk. Dr. Yamamoto says his boss at the university advised him to halt the tests. Dr. Yamamoto insisted on carrying on. He discontinued the drug on the first patient, and she recovered. He tried compactin on other patients in lower doses. It succeeded in lowering cholesterol in nine patients by an average of 27 percent, according to a paper he later published. Dr. Yamamoto concedes he didn't give the patients much information about the treatment he was testing on them. " They trusted me, and I think I responded to that trust, " he says. The first patient later was treated with other drugs, had a daughter and still is living today in southern Japan, according to Dr. Yamamoto, who showed a picture of her but declined to disclose her name. When Sankyo saw Dr. Yamamoto's results, it agreed to put Dr. Endo's drug in formal clinical testing. Dr. Endo figured he had brought it as far as he could, and decided to quit Sankyo for a professor's post at Tokyo Noko University. It wasn't a friendly parting: Dr. Endo still complains that the company ordered the scientists in his lab not to help him carry his boxes of papers to the moving truck. Sankyo wasn't the only company working on statins, because it had inadvertently helped a competitor, Merck. In a one-page 1976 agreement, Sankyo granted Merck access to its data and methods connected with Dr. Endo's statin. Companies often release such information to potential business partners, but this agreement left a gaping hole: Merck didn't owe Sankyo anything if it found the same anticholesterol properties in another fungal byproduct. Sure enough, in 1978 Merck discovered in a different fungus a substance that was nearly identical to Dr. Endo's, this one called lovastatin. Dr. Endo says he also discovered this substance independently, during his first months at Tokyo Noko University. Merck held the rights in the U.S., and in 1987 began marketing it in the U.S. as Mevacor -- the first FDA-approved statin. Sankyo eventually gave up on compactin and pursued studies of another statin with a similar chemical structure, which it licensed to Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. Bristol-Myers began selling it in the U.S. in 1991 as Pravachol. By the mid-1990s, statins were the talk of the medical world, as studies showed they significantly reduced heart-attack risk. Mevacor, Pravachol and another chemically related Merck statin sold as Zocor, which went on sale in 1992, would each bring in billions of dollars in sales. Today Pfizer's Lipitor, which is a statin but has a chemical structure unrelated to Dr. Endo's original find, is the world's best-selling drug, with $12 billion a year in sales. Even as the drugs became famous, Dr. Endo's anonymity remained. A lengthy company history on Sankyo's Web site describes the discovery of compactin but never mentions Dr. Endo by name. A Sankyo spokesman says Dr. Endo was a " central figure among the discoverers " of the first statin, but declines to go as far as Western scientists in describing his contribution. S. Brown and ph Goldstein, who won the Nobel Prize for their work in cholesterol, wrote in 2004: " The millions of people whose lives will be extended through statin therapy owe it all to Akira Endo. " The broader lesson of Dr. Endo's discovery -- that natural products such as substances in fungi can be an important source of new drugs - - also tended to get buried. In the 1990s, companies became frustrated with natural products, which often are hard to make in quantity, and turned to artificial chemicals. But those chemicals often turned out to work poorly in humans. Meanwhile, scientists have gotten better at figuring out the structure of chemicals found in nature and at reproducing them in the laboratory. Dr. Endo says he never earned a cent from his statin discovery. When he left Sankyo in 1978, he was earning less than $2,000 a month at the exchange rates of the time. Later in his university research he discovered yet more fungal byproducts, this time for use in chewing gum, cosmetics and other products. Now retired from the university, he keeps an office in a neat two-room apartment in western Tokyo, with closets full of files he has kept meticulously over the years. A few years ago, Dr. Endo went in for a day-long health examination and found out he had slightly high cholesterol. He says the doctor didn't know who he was and informed him, " We have good drugs for that. " Dr. Endo says he took Mevacor for a while but stopped. At his checkup in 2004, his LDL, or " bad " cholesterol, was 155, a level at which many U.S. doctors would prescribe a statin. Dr. Endo says he didn't take anything and brought the number down to 130 last year by exercising more. Why would the inventor of statins bypass his own invention? Dr. Endo can only cite a Japanese proverb, " The indigo dyer wears white trousers. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2006 Report Share Posted January 10, 2006 This is pure hype.. First thing, the 'idea' - the fact that 'natural substances can be made into drugs' is as old as drugs themselves.. Second thing, LIVING THINGS SHOULD NEVER BE PATENTABLE... Especially, when a NEW patent on a longstanding medicinal use of a plant is used to MONOPOLIZE and CONTROL medicinal use of that plant.. If a patent should be issued to anybody, it should be issued to the people who TRADITIONALLY and HISTORICALLY developed the original medical treatments based on the plant. The healers and native-ethnobotanists who preserved the knowledge.. Not the foreign corporations who come in to steal and then cynically exploit that knowledge... claiming that it is 'their' 'invention'. Right.. NO WAY... Often, they then try to make that medicine so expensive as to be unaffordable.. That is THEFT and MURDER... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 12, 2006 Report Share Posted January 12, 2006 The one big problem the THEIVES have is that they isolate the *active* ingredient in a botanical and ASSUME that the other parts can be discarded. If it wasn't there to begin with it would not be needed. I forget which plant they tried to synthesize and claimed it didn't work. Naturopaths and others in the alt med arena knew that all the parts were needed if only for a small % of the drug. I agree that ANY patent needs to go to those who *found* it not tho those who are bastardizing it for thier own bottom line. On Tue, 10 Jan 2006, LiveSimply wrote: > Date: Tue, 10 Jan 2006 15:25:14 -0800 > From: LiveSimply <quackadillian@...> > Reply- > > Subject: Re: [] Drug firms, scientists go back to nature > > This is pure hype.. First thing, the 'idea' - the fact that 'natural > substances can be made into drugs' is as old as drugs themselves.. > > Second thing, LIVING THINGS SHOULD NEVER BE PATENTABLE... > > Especially, when a NEW patent on a longstanding medicinal use of a > plant is used to MONOPOLIZE and CONTROL medicinal use of that plant.. > > If a patent should be issued to anybody, it should be issued to the > people who TRADITIONALLY and HISTORICALLY developed the original > medical treatments based on the plant. The healers and > native-ethnobotanists who preserved the knowledge.. > > Not the foreign corporations who come in to steal and then cynically > exploit that knowledge... claiming that it is 'their' 'invention'. > Right.. NO WAY... > > Often, they then try to make that medicine so expensive as to be unaffordable.. > > That is THEFT and MURDER... > > > > > FAIR USE NOTICE: > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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