| Finding the morphine within |
|
|
| By Jo Seltzer, special to the Beacon |
| Posted 8:55 am Mon., 8.30.10 |
|
Why do some people have a high tolerance for pain, while others experience the slightest touch as painful? Why do some injured soldiers perform heroic feats and claim that they felt no pain at the time? Nobody quite knows, but new findings by Meinhart Zenk and Toni Kutchan at the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center offer some tantalizing possibilities. What is morpine? Morphine is one of those secondary products used by the opium poppy (right) for
communication with the environment.
Secondary products are useful to a
plant for various reasons such as a poison for defense or a color that
would attract a pollinator. We might use them as drugs or dyes.
Familiar drugs from plants include digoxin from foxglove, quinine from
the cinchona tree, and the poisons strychnine and curare.
Humans and other mammals excrete morphine in their urine. That has been known for a long time. The levels of morphine are also known to vary widely. The source of the morphine has been the unanswered question until now. Zenk and colleagues in Germany showed in a recent article that mice, and presumably all mammals, have the metabolic equipment to manufacture morphine from the amino acid tyrosine, found in all proteins. Furthermore, the way morphine is produced by mammals mimics the same chemical steps as the pathway that the opium poppy uses. It would be difficult to overstate the importance of morphine in medicine. It is the drug of choice for accident victims, on the battlefield and for easing pain and anxiety at the end of life. All morphine is extracted from the opium made by poppies -- chemical synthesis of the drug would take about 30 steps and consequently it would be prohibitively costly. Opium, the dried latex collected by making cuts in the fruit of the poppy, also contains codeine and other non-opiate molecules. measuring morphineOnly small amounts of urine can be collected from a mouse. Morphine is a trace constituent of the urine. Zenk's research was made possible by a new instrument, the Orbitrap mass spectrometer, that calculates mass:charge ratios out to five decimal places. With this degree of super-precision and super-sensitivity each molecule can be assigned a unique number and can be distinguished from other very similar molecules. Opium has a long history. It is said that the Turkish army was nearly invincible in the 17th century because along with their ultra-strong coffee they used opium to reduce fear and inhibitions. The opium wars between China and England in the 18th century opened China to trade with the West. Today, opium poppies are grown legally in certain countries as a source of medical morphine. Illegal poppy crops, from Afghanistan for example, contribute to the street drug problem throughout the world. Kutchan emphasizes that the opium poppy is the only plant source of morphine, and consequently poppy seeds would be the only source in the normal human diet. (Some may remember the "Seinfeld" episode in which Elaine failed a drug test because she had eaten a poppy-seed muffin.)
They injected the mice with a series of heavy isotope-labeled molecules known to be in the poppy's morphine synthetic pathway. In each experiment they collected the urine and found the labeled precursors had been converted into other precursor molecules further along the morphine synthetic pathway -- as well as into morphine itself. Since the products they detected are identical to the intermediates in the poppy's morphine synthetic pathway, the steps involved are the same. Kutchan points out that "nature has invented morphine twice" -- a true case of convergent evolution. High Honors
|
Brent Jones | St. Louis Beacon
This Saturday was the debut of a new show by The Improv Shop that will bring out of town improv teams to St. Louis to play for — and with — a local audience. The Road Show brought teams "Everybody Grok" and "Felt" from Chicago.
We talked to Eric Christensen, producer of the Road Show and member of local improv team "Ted Dangerous"; Katie Nunn, member of "Ted Dangerous" and improv coach; and Melanie Penn and Ranjan Khan, members of local teams "Melanj" and "Magic Ratio"; about the St. Louis improv scene and why it's important to welcome teams from other cities to perform here.
Conversations: Noted essayist Gerald Early talks baseball, race and class
St. Louis author Gerald Early talks about the declining numbers of African Americans in the sport. This story is part of a larger look at class in the region, our series Class: The Great Divide
M.W. Guzy takes a sighting of Baton Bob in a Super Bowl crowd to reflect on St. Louis and the Rams.
Doug Williams says the proposed consent decree before the U.S. district court here may not be perfect, but it's the best way to move forward to stop the costs of inadquate waste- and storm-water systems.
M.W. Guzy fears his daughters' affection for trash TV might have been genetically inherited, as he finds himself drawn to the anybody-but-Mitt show, playing on a loop on cable "news' channels.
In this week's Beacon Roundtable, Dick Weiss, Jason Rosenbaum, Jo Mannies, Robert Joiner and Dale Singer sit down to talk about the Missouri primary and redistricting, the controversy around…
General manager Nicole Hollway is back to the Beacon blog and she's trying to piece together what social media is and means to people.
Ben Finegold says recent moves by Lindenwood and Webster universities have positioned the region to be the chess capita of the United States.
@
Register to receive our daily email of new content. If you're already registered, email us at [email protected] with the subject line "subscribe".
The Missouri Foundation for Health will hold a meeting to highlight its funding strategy for 2012. The meeting is scheduled for 9-11 a.m. on February 1 at the Missouri Foundation for Health's 2nd floor training room in the Grand Central building at Union Station in St. Louis.
Meetings are free and designed for health and community action nonprofits, community service clubs, human service providers and community leaders. RSVPs are encouraged: Contact Maranda Witherspoon at 800-655-5560 or [email protected]. More information.