Good News for Africa Malaria Day

Africa recently marked its second annual Africa Malaria Day designed to highlight efforts at controlling the deadly disease. Almost one million people die from malaria-related complications annually; 90 percent of those victims are in Africa.

Despite the horrific figures, reports of new breakthroughs in understanding the mosquitoes that carry malaria was announced.

The Hartford Courant published a report on April 23, 2002, claiming that gene researchers would soon announce the completion of their efforts to sequence the mosquito genome.

This would mean that the genome for all three organisms involved in malaria — humans, mosquitoes, and the malaria parasite — have been sequenced, which should give researchers new insights into how malaria spreads and how better to treat and/or prevent it.

The Courant also reported that researchers at Case Western Reserve University in Ohio will soon report that they managed to modify mosquitoes in the lab so that they were incapable of transmitting malaria.

Hopefully these new findings will mean the dawning of a new era of malaria research — one that can finally find a way to eradicate this disease.

Sources:

Africa marks war on malaria. Corrine, Podger, The BBC, April 25, 2002.

Scientists near big victory in mosquito wars. Robert Cooke, The Hartford Courant, April 23, 2002.

Novartis Chief Says His Company Would Hesitate to Invest Further in the UK

The Daily Telegraph (London) reported today that Novartis chief executive officer Dan Vasella said that his company would find it difficult to expand its efforts in Great Britain so long as animal rights terrorism remains a serious problem in the UK.

In an interview with the Daily Telegraph, Vasella said animal rights extremism was a big concern to Novartis,

We would hesitate to increase our exposure to it. It’s a very serious matter. It’s a big issue — big for the UK. It isn’t just hurting the industry, it is hurting the country. It is a big deterrent when you are considering site locations.

Like other observers, Vasella seems skeptical that new regulations and laws have done much to deter animal rights extremism. “While we appreciate what the UK Government does against this form of terrorism,” Vasella said, “it does not appear to be enough as there still are incidents.”

Source:

Novartis shies from animal activists: The Swiss drugs giant hesitates on UK investment due to animal rights ‘terrorists’. Rosie Murray-West, The Daily Telegraph (London), May 1, 2002.

In Defense of Animals/Fund for Animals Claim Victory that Wasn't

At the In Defense of Animals web site, IDA reprints a list of “Animal Rights Victories in 1999” that was compiled by Michael Markarian of The Fund for Animals. Not surprisingly, one of the “victories” on the list never actually happened. Midway through the list is this item,

The NIH banned the use of mice in monoclonal antibody production, saving the lives of up to one million mice per year, and admitting that animals feel “pain, distress, or discomfort.”

The only problem is that the NIH did not ban the use of mice to produce monoclonal antibodies and the reason it decided against a ban goes to the heart of the debate over animal research.

What’s a monoclonal antibody? It is a method of mass producing specific antibodies. Researchers take tumor cells that will reproduce forever if given the proper nutrients and fuse those with cells that produce specific antibodies. The result is called a hybridoma which is then cloned to produce large numbers of cells that will produce specific antibodies.

The ability to produce monoclonal antibodies is a direct result of years of animal research and animals are essential for the first phase of the process, the creation of a hybridoma. Typically, a hybridoma is created by immunizing an animal (almost always a mouse), and then obtaining immune cells from the animal’s spleen. These cells then get fused with the tumorous cancer cell so that they can reproduce indefinitely.

Nobody suggests that there is an animal alternative to this process. Regardless of how they are later cultivated, monoclonal antibodies require the use of an animal during the initial phase.

But cultivation of these cells is another story. Researchers are able to growth monoclonal antibodies either in vivo or in vitro.

The in vivo model involves injecting animals (again, almost always mice) with hybridomas. The hybridomas reproduce and produce a fluid called ascites on the animal’s abdomen. The fluid contains a large number of monoclonal antibodies that can then be harvested for further study.

The in vitro model involves culturing the hybridomas in one or another culturing medium. Note that this also involves the use of animals (though not whole animals), with the most popular method of culturing being using fetal bovine serum.

In 1997, the American Anti-Vivisection Society petitioned the National Institutes of Health to prohibit researchers receiving NIH grants from using the whole mouse method to produce monoclonal antibodies. Since in vitro methods were available to produce the antibodies, AAVS argued, animals were suffering needlessly.

Contrary to what IDA apparently believes, the NIH rejected an outright ban. Instead, after commissioning a study of the issue from the National Research Council, it issued a policy that for NIH grants in vitro methods of monoclonal antibody production should be the preferred method of production.

Using whole mice to produce monoclonal antibodies is still allowable under NIH, however, it in vitro methods are not suitable for one reason or another.

The National Research Council that looked into the issue found that there is a continued scientific need to produce monoclonal antibodies in mice. According to its 1999 report (which is available here),

There are several reasons why the mouse method of producing mAb cannot be abandoned: some cell lines do not adapt well to tissue-culture conditions; in applications where several different mouse mAb at high concentrations are required for injection into mice, the in vitro method can be inefficient; rat cell lines usually do not efficiently generate mAb in rats and adapt poorly to tissue-culture conditions but do produce mAb in immunocompromised mice; downstream purification or concentration from in vitro systems can lead to protein denaturation and decreased antibody activity; tissue-culture methods can yield mAb that do not reflect the normal modification of proteins with sugars, and this abnormality might influence binding capacity and other critical biologic functions of mAb; contamination of valuable cell lines with fungi or bacteria requires prompt passage through a mouse to save the cell line; and inability of some cell lines that do adapt to tissue-culture conditions to maintain adequate production of mAb poses a serious problem. For these reasons, the committee concludes that there is a scientific necessity to permit the continuation of the mouse ascites method of producing mAb. However, note that over time, as in vitro methods improve, the need for the mouse ascites method will decrease.

Maybe someday there will be no need to use mice to mass produce monoclonal antibodies, but that day is not yet upon us.

At the time the NIH changed its policy, the American Anti-Vivisection Society estimated that about 90 percent of monoclonal antibody production done as part of NIH grants would move to in vitro models, with the other 10 percent still being performed in vivo. So far, this writer is unaware of any research on just how much the new policy affected the landscape of monoclonal antibody production.

But, one thing that did not happen was an outright ban of antibody production in mice as In Defense of Animals and The Fund for Animals claimed.

Sources:

Animal Rights Victories in 1999, Compiled by Michael Markarian of The Fund for Animals For the 2000 Summit for Animals. In Defense of Animals, 2000.

Animal protection group precipitates historic policy change at NIH. Press Release, American Anti-Vivisection Society, December 22, 1999.

Monoclonal Antibody Production. National Research Council, 1999.

Monoclonal T-Cell Receptors on the Horizon

New Scientist recently reported on research into monoclonal t-cell receptors that promises to create “magic bullet” drugs that will seek out and destroy cancer and other diseased cells.

T cells spot abnormal protein fragments by inspecting peptides produced by the proteins. When an abnormal peptide is detected, the T cell destroys the cell.

Researchers at biomedical companies Avidex and Sunol Molecular have managed to produce artificial T-cell receptors that can exist independently of the T cell itself. They have developed a process where insert the genes that manufacture T cells into E. coli bacteria, which are then used to reproduce the artificial T-cell receptors, in much the same way that monoclonal antibodies are produced.

So, imagine researchers want to find a way to attack cancer. They might examine the T cells of cancer patients until they find a receptor that targets the cancer. Then, they would insert the genes for producing that receptor into the E. coli and be able to produce large amounts of that T-cell receptor. Add genes giving the T-cell receptor the ability to destroy the cancerous cells, and you have a “magic bullet” drug that will kill only diseased cells, and should kill all diseased cells (unlike monoclonal antibodies, which only kill about 10 to 15 percent of diseased cells because they target antigens rather than peptides).

Research on animal models is already underway to perfect this process, and both companies seems confident that human trials involving T-cell receptors are only a few years away.

Source:

New drug leaves diseased cells nowhere to hide. Andy, Coghlan, The New Scientist, April 21, 2002.

‘Destroyer’ drug unveiled. The BBC, April 19, 2002.

Korean Restaurants May Offer Dog Meat Samples to World Cup Tourists

Last week the Associated Press reported that a group of dog meat restaurants planned to offer visitors to the World Cup free samples of dog meat, including steamed meat, soup, sandwiches and hamburgers containing the controversial South Korean delicacy.

About 3 million of South Korea’s 47 million people are estimated to eat dog meat and there are as many as 6,000 restaurants that serve dog meat in South Korea.

But a few days after the Associated Press report, Choi Han-Gwon, the leader of the dog meat restaurant association, denied the Associated Press report — though his denial is unlikely to assuage animal rights activists.

The Courier Mail quoted Han-Gwon as saying that although the restaurateurs would not offer free samples of dog meat, “We plan to develop canned dog meat tonic juice, which football fans can enjoy in their stadium seats while watching the games.”

Han-Gwon said that offering dog meat hamburgers and sandwiches would be too “sensational[ist]” and bring “excessive publicity” — along with a possible backlash from the South Korean government.

The World Cup gets under on May 31 and is co-hosted by South Korea and Japan.

Sources:

World Cup to Have Dog Meat Samples. Associated Press, April 28, 2002.

Visitors to sample dog meat delicacy. Courier Mail, April 27, 2002.

Renewed Call for a Global Shark Finning Ban

European conservationists are joining a campaign to call for a worldwide ban on shark finning — where sharks are caught, their fins cut off while they are still alive, and then the sharks are dumped back in the water.

According to The Shark Trust and the European network of Sealife Centres, human beings kill up to 100 million sharks each year, with many sharks killed just to harvest their fins for use in soup.

Shark finning is a lucrative business, with a single fin from a whale shark or a basking shark being worth as much as $14,500. Total exports of shark fins from Europe in 1999 totaled an estimated 2 million tons.

The United States has prohibited shark finning in its territorial waters in the Atlantic Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea since 1993, and in February 2002 extended that ban to its Pacific Ocean waters. Finning is also prohibited by state law as well in most coastal states.

Source:

Global shark-finning ban urged. Alex Kirby, The BBC, April 26, 2002.