The molecule is granulin, one of a family of protein growth factors involved with cell proliferation.
«It’s produced by a parasitic liver fluke, Opisthorchis viverrini, which originally came to our attention because it causes a liver cancer that kills 26,000 people each year in Thailand," parasitologist Dr Michael Smout said.
As part of their work on a potential vaccine to protect people from the parasite, Dr Smout and colleagues established that the granulin it produces has a hidden talent — it supercharges healing.
«We realised the molecule, discovered in worm spit, could offer a solution for
With fellow researchers from the AITHM at James Cook University in Cairns, Dr Smout has been investigating ways to produce granulin in sufficient quantities for
The team first tried recombinant DNA techniques, effectively inserting granulin into bacteria, with the aim of producing plentiful supplies of a reliable copy of the molecule.
«Unfortunately, granulin didn’t perform well when we introduced it to E. coli bacteria, so we couldn’t use recombinant techniques to produce a testable supply," said Professor Norelle Daly, whose research involves exploring the potential of peptides as drug candidates for therapeutic applications.
«We had to go back to the drawing board and find a way to synthesize part of the molecule — to build our own version of designer worm spit," she said.
The researchers worked to establish which parts of the molecule were critical to wound healing, and to find a way to reproduce the active parts of granulin molecules (peptides).
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy revealed the molecule’s complex shape: a string of amino acids bent into a twisted 3D shape that includes hairpin bends.
«In biology the shape and fold of a molecule can be critical to its function," Dr Smout said. «Getting the fold right is important — it can be like the difference between throwing a well folded paper plane, or tossing a crumpled ball of paper.»
After testing different segments and structures, the team concluded that those hairpin bends were the key.
«They’re held in the twisted
«You could say we’ve found an extra fold that helps our peptide paper plane fly straight and target wounds.»
The
Now that they can
«We have plenty of work to do before clinical trials, but we’re confident we have a very strong contender for what could one day be a cream that a diabetic could apply at home, avoiding a lengthy hospital stay and possible amputation," said Professor Alex Loukas, whose work includes the investigation of hookworm proteins to treat autoimmune and allergic diseases.
«A
«Statistically, one in every seven diabetics in Australia will have a
The research is the cover story for the latest edition of the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry.
Source: https://www.jcu.edu.au/news/releases/2017/may/designer-worm-spit-supercharges-healing