Algae put to work in fight against cancer

By Mark Prigg; The Sunday Times
Copyright 1999 Ottawa Citizen
January 10, 1999



Tests being carried out by the U.S. National Cancer Institute could prove a British professor's theory that chemicals found in algae can slow the growth of cancer cells and may even kill them.

According to Steve Rowland, a professor of organic geochemistry at the University of Plymouth, initial tests on the chemicals he discovered in the algae have been promising.

"A French laboratory has already carried out some initial tests on a sample of the algae and found it slowed the progress of lung cancer cells in a test tube," he says.

Samples of the chemicals found in the algae have now been sent to the National Cancer Institute, where they will be tested with dozens of different types of cancer cells to see if their effects are widespread.

"If the chemicals are found to affect lots of different types of cells, then our aim is to get a pharmaceutical company involved and try to produce a drug," says Mr. Rowland. He hopes to receive the results of the tests within 10 weeks.

Mr. Rowland believes the discovery, although promising, is still at a very early stage. "We don't yet know what effect these chemicals have on healthy tissue, or what types of cancer they can slow. All the experiments have been carried out in test tubes. Despite this, we are hopeful this could eventually have some benefit for cancer sufferers."

The new chemicals were discovered by accident, as a result of academic research into the composition of mud. Mr. Rowland was looking for clues about global climate changes when he came across the previously unknown class of chemicals.

After further investigation, the team discovered the new chemicals were common in mud around the globe, including Antarctica. Six different chemicals, all belonging to an entirely new family, were eventually found.

The chemicals are polyunsaturated oils, which Mr. Rowland believes could hamper their use in medicine.

Eventually, the team discovered a type of algae known as haslea ostrearira was responsible for producing the chemicals. They are fairly common around the world, but the only people to have cultured the algae successfully are a group of French researchers from the University of Nantes. The same French university also carried out the recent tests on the algae chemicals.

"Hopefully this breakthrough now shows what could be contained in these plants and will help us get the funding we need to carry on our research," Mr. Rowland says.

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