The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Crabs and mud could be source of new lifesaving drugs for cancer Research: University team explores biodiversi­ty

- BY STEPHEN WALSH

African crabs, plants and mud could be the basis of the next generation of cancer drugs and antibiotic­s, Aberdeen University researcher­s say.

Scientists have been awarded almost £715,000 from the Medical Research Council and the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t to explore the potential medical benefits contained within Ghana’s plants and wildlife.

The Aberdeen academics have teamed up with counterpar­ts from the University of Ghana.

The project will use the existing expertise of the researcher­s to explore the lifesaving properties potentiall­y contained within the soils, sediments, plants, mollusc, fish, crabs and crustacean­s native to the area.

Professor Marcel Jaspars, from the university’s marine bio-discovery centre, is one of the experts involved.

He said: “Africa’s rich biodiversi­ty offers opportunit­ies for the developmen­t of potentiall­y lifesaving drugs, and through this project we will assemble a total of 300 novel West African strains.

“From there we will isolate, characteri­se and determine the antibiotic, anti-parasitic and anti-cancer properties of the molecules they express under laboratory conditions.

“Most importantl­y, we will find ways to induce these microbes to express some of the molecules that are not easily produced under normal lab conditions, to see these can ultimately be selected for further developmen­t into drugs.”

Dr Kwaku Kyeremeh, from the Ghana university, microbial added: “Africa has the highest disease burden globally and therefore, its scientists should not be left out in the search for solutions to this problem.

“Results in our laboratori­es have shown that, pushed to the limits with different chemical cues, Ghanaian microbes always respond by producing very potent chemicals which can act as future antibiotic, anti-parasitic and anti-cancer drugs.

“We will use a multi-step process to generate a highly diverse range of molecules to serve as a pipeline from which future drugs will be developed.”

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