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	 Scientists 
	shift medicinal properties from one plant to another 
	 
	
   
            
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		[September 11, 2015] 
		By Will Dunham 
			
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A number of 
		important drugs come from plants, but some medicinal plants are 
		endangered or tricky to grow. For some scientists, finding ways to 
		ensure ready access to these drugs has become a priority. 
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			 Researchers on Thursday said they have identified the genes that 
			enable an endangered Himalayan plant to produce a chemical vital to 
			making a widely used chemotherapy drug, and inserted them into an 
			easily grown laboratory plant that then produced the same chemical. 
			 
			The endangered plant, called the mayapple, produces a precursor 
			chemical to the chemotherapy drug etoposide, which is used in many 
			patients with lung cancer, testicular cancer, brain cancer, 
			lymphoma, leukemia and other cancers. 
			 
			The researchers genetically engineered the easily grown laboratory 
			plant Nicotiana benthamiana, a wild relative of tobacco, to make the 
			chemical. 
			  
			"Many plant-based drugs are not found in large quantities in nature 
			and are difficult to make in the lab," said Stanford University 
			chemical engineering professor Elizabeth Sattely, who led the study 
			published in the journal Science. 
			 
			"Mimicking the way nature makes these molecules is a promising 
			alternative, but to do that we need to find the genes. This can be a 
			major challenge because plant genomes can be very large and genes 
			are hard to find," Sattely said. 
			 
			The researchers said they discovered six genes from the mayapple 
			plant that in combination with four previously known genes produce 
			the chemical needed to make the chemotherapy drug. 
			 
			"We used these genes to engineer a wild relative of tobacco to make 
			the drug precursor and think we could also use these genes to make 
			the drug in other easy-to-grow organisms such as yeast," Sattely 
			said. 
			
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			The tobacco plant or yeast would provide the ability to produce the 
			drug in a controlled laboratory setting. Researchers led by another 
			Stanford scientist last month unveiled a new method to make potent 
			painkilling opioids using bioengineered baker's yeast instead of 
			poppies. 
			 
			"Producing plant-derived drugs in easy-to-grow plants or baker's 
			yeast in many cases will be a much more efficient way to make these 
			drugs," Sattely said. "This is currently being done for artemisinin 
			(a malaria drug derived from the sweet wormwood plant), and will 
			likely be the way we make morphine (derived from poppies) in the 
			future." 
			 
			(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Eric 
			Beech) 
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