Thursday, July 12, 2012

Possums Protein to Provide Universal Anti-Poison Potion

Opossum protein neutralizes nearly all poisons
Opossums may someday provide an antidote to nearly all forms of poison, including everything from snakebites to ricin.

The Journal of Venomous Animals and Toxins has found that the American opossum produces a protein known as Lethal Toxin-Neutralizing Factor (LTNF). And as the Boing Boing blog points out, the LTNF protein is exactly what it sounds like, seeking out otherwise lethal poisons that have entered an opossum's body and neutralizing them.

Amazingly, tests on the opossum LTNF found that the protein even left the marsupial creatures immune to poisons from snakes on other continents that the American opossum had not been previously exposed to.
So this is pretty cool; how does a single protein recognize and neutralize a wide variety of deadly toxins, including ones it wasn't exposed to in the course of evolution, and not have any harmful effect on organisms that carry it?
scientists then injected mice with the LTNF protein and subjected the rodents to venom from otherwise deadly creatures, including Thailand cobras, Australian taipans, Brazilian rattlesnakes, scorpions and honeybees. When the venom did not kill the mice, the mice were then exposed to deadly poisons, including ricin and botulinum toxin. And again, the LTNF protein was able to diffuse the poison, leaving the mice unharmed.
I would think at top priority ought to be getting that protein purified, it's amino acid sequence and folding determined, and a possible route to clinical production explored (Plant the gene in E. coli?).  Not that I have a problem with grinding up Possums to make medicine, but there might be a better way?  Or maybe we could just scrape enough off the highways.
Interestingly, the journal entry on LTNF was published more than 10 years ago, in 1999. As several readers have pointed out, this raises questions as to whether the protein benefits would be applicable to humans and why the test results are only now making news.
How did that get overlooked so long?  Did the post-doc who did work get a job where he/she/it didn't need to produce anything, like say become a regulator?

3 comments:

  1. Ha, the same question here? What were they waiting for to come to us with the results? What took them so long?

    But, if not taking this into account, the news itself sounds really fascinating. One small creature as a super-duper defense against all possible (and even impossible I think) types of poisons. I just can't get how such a protein can work.

    Let's see what these scientists will tell us in 10 more years :)
    Best regards,
    Sweeties CO
    My blog about proteins for women

    ReplyDelete
  2. Research continued up until B.V. Lipps passed away in 2010. She was publishing papers based on her research until at least 2009. Her death may have slowed the development of a human ready synthetic LTFN drastically.

    ReplyDelete