FEATURE- Beautiful but deadly creatures both kill and cure

   
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - The tiny red-and-yellow striped frog
looked harmless enough but just a single touch to the skin of
the jewel-like creature could mean instant death.
    For weeks it had been kept carefully imprisoned and denied
the insects it normally ate. What Edson Albuquerque and his
colleagues hoped was that their theory would prove right -- the
frog got its alkaloid poisons from eating ants or some other
insect and the toxins would disappear after the special diet.
    ``To prove whether this was true we held the frog in our
hands to see whether it would kill us or not,'' Albuquerque told
a recent seminar. That he was alive to tell the tale showed the
value of his theory.
    But the poison-dart frog is more than a curiosity. People
living in the Amazon for centuries used the toxins produced by
the frogs on arrows and darts to hunt with -- thus the name.
Aimed at a monkey high in a tree, they were mercilessly deadly.
''One shot and goodbye,'' Albuquerque said.
    Now it seems these poisons could benefit more than just
hunters. Chemical analysis has shown they are targeted at some
of the most basic cell processes, and just a little tweaking can
turn something deadly into a valuable human drug.
    For instance, fugu pufferfish are a thrilling delicacy in
Japan because they must be prepared by an expert chef or the
gourmet who eats them may die. The reason is tetrodoxin, a
poison that is ``exquisitely'' targeted against sodium channels,
according to Dr. Bruce Bean of Harvard Medical School.
    Sodium channels are molecular doorways on the surface of the
cell that control how much sodium goes in and out. Tetrodoxin
acts to prop open the sodium channels, letting too much sodium
into the cells and destroying them.
  
    'NATURE PROVIDED IT'
    ``This is a molecule that you would never think of making
from scratch but nature provided it,'' Bean told a seminar in
New York on the value of animals, plants and microbes to human
health sponsored by the American Museum of Natural History.
    Scientists have begun to appreciate this and are combing
nature for new compounds. For example, one of the poisons made
by the tiny Amazon frogs, known as batrachotoxin, also works
against sodium channels.
    Since the frog does not make the poison, as Albuquerque's
experiment proved, why does it not die when it eats the ants or
whatever it is that does make the poison? ``Over millions of
years the frog has made subtle modifications of the receptor
molecule and it has become insensitive to the effects of
batrachotoxin,'' Albuquerque said.
    If scientists could figure out just what the modifications
are, they could possibly use the same mechanism to treat human
diseases in which sodium can destroy cells such as Alzheimer's
and Parkinson's, both fatal and incurable brain diseases.
    Another of the little Amazon frogs, the epipedobates,
produces epibatadine. This chemical works on the nicotinic
receptor, another important cellular doorway best known because
one of the chemicals whose effects it mediates is nicotine.
    Abbott Laboratories says the effects of epibatidine can help
scientists understand diseases ranging from Alzheimer's to
epilepsy. Michael Williams, head of neurological and urological
diseases at Abbott, said the company was developing a synthetic
version it calls ABT-594.
  
    PAINKILLER WITH 200 TIMES POWER OF MORPHINE
    Epibatidine can also act as a painkiller -- one that is 200
times more powerful than morphine -- but it does not work though
the opioid mechanism that morphine uses.
    ``Unlike morphine it lacks the major side-effects that make
morphine undesirable,'' Williams said. These include
constipation, addiction and the need to keep using use more of
the drug to get the same effect.
    Other poisonous animals kill in other ways and can offer
intriguing new treatments for a range of diseases. Robert Gould,
executive director of pharmacology at Merck Research
Laboratories, tells how snakes can help prevent heart attacks.
    Researchers at Merck knew the Indian tree viper's bite
caused victims to bleed to death. Thinking the venom might carry
an agent useful for fighting blood clots, which cause heart
attacks and stroke, they started milking snakes for their venom
and analyzing it.
    They isolated a protein they named echistatin from a viper
found in North Africa. It had some components that were similar
to fibrinogen, which helps ``glue'' blood platelets together to
make clots, so they knew they were on the right track.
    A little fiddling in the lab and they came up with a small
molecule that could stop platelets from aggregating. They
developed it into Aggrastat, known generically as tirofiban, and
doctors who advise the Food and Drug Administration have urged
the FDA to approve it for preventing heart attacks in people
with unstable angina or who have had an attack already.
    It could be on the market within a few months as the FDA
usually follows the advice of its advisory committees.
    Some of the deadly creatures that can provide useful
medicines live in the sea. William Fenical, director of the
Center for Marine Biotechnology and Biomedicine at the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography in San Diego, says a soft coral
known as pseudopterogorgia, the Caribbean sea whip, produces a
compound that can control inflammation and pain.
    ``This is the future for breast and ovarian cancer,'' he said.
REUTERS