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Reuters
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Researchers at Stanford
University who altered the genetic code of yeast have produced synthetic
opioids, a new study shows. The breakthrough could lead to more effective pain
killers and cheaper drugs. A team of US scientists announced Thursday that they had
genetically engineered yeast to convert sugar into hydrocodone, an opioid in
the same chemical family as morphine, in just three to five days. Their work
was published in the journal Science.
World Health Organization estimates show that 5.5 billion people suffer from
pain and have limited or no access to relief, so the development could find
significant application in the future.
“This
is the most complicated chemical synthesis ever engineered in yeast,” said
senior author Christina Smolke, an associate professor of bioengineering at
Stanford, in a statement.
Smolke’s
team “found and fine-tuned snippets of DNA from other plants, bacteria and even
rats,” which produce enzymes necessary for the yeast cells to convert sugar
into hydrocodone, a compound that deactivates pain receptors in the brain.
RT US report continues:
The
discovery is an important step toward engineering painkillers from yeast, but
it’s just the beginning as the team had to use 4,400 gallons of yeast to create
a single dose of painkiller.
“The
techniques we developed and demonstrate for opioid pain relievers can be
adapted to produce many plant-derived compounds to fight cancers, infectious
diseases and chronic conditions such as high blood pressure and arthritis,”
Smolke said.
Opiates
like heroin and morphine are made from opium poppies typically grown in places
like Australia, Europe and the Middle East. Researchers say it can take a year
to produce a batch of medicine from poppy plants, which are harvested,
processed, and shipped to pharmaceutical factories where the active drug
molecules can be extracted and refined. As farming is the sole source of these
important painkillers, supplies can be jeopardized by crop failures due to
inclement weather or pests.
“When
we started work a decade ago, many experts thought it would be impossible to
engineer yeast to replace the entire farm-to-factory process,” said Smolke.
Still,
Smolke and her team said the new process for making opioid painkillers could
raise concerns about increasing the potential for opioid abuse, which has
become a problem in the US.
Stanford holds the patents
for the technology, but Smolke and members of her research team have formed a
company.
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