Unlocking the Medicinal Secrets in Plants
Two Asian countries may have growing wild in their pastures and on
their mountainsides the secrets to preventing numerous human diseases.
Uzbekistan and its neighbor, Kyrgyzstan, which together, are about the
size of California and South Dakota, are teeming with wildflowers and
plants that have been curing ailments for centuries, but without formal
scientific testing and the quality control needed to distribute them
to the rest of the world.
Researchers from Rutgers University and the University of Illinois
are working together on a project that will ultimately bring the medicinal
properties of Asian plants to the public. “The Uzbekistan and
Kyrgyzstan people have anecdotal evidence that certain plants can cure
or prevent diseases,” said Mary Ann Lila, a plant scientist at
the University of Illinois. “But they don’t have the infrastructure.
They don’t have the ability to select the phytochemicals that
are effective in a plant and standardize it so that each bottle of the
resulting drug is identical in quality and potency.”
Lila explained that when plants are stressed, they produce phytochemicals
(plant-produced chemicals) to protect themselves against a fungus or
other pest. These same chemicals can produce protective responses in
humans against a similar fungus or disease. Lila simulates in the lab,
situations that will cause the plant to produce these chemical products.
“If we relied on harvesting the plants from the mountainside when
we needed more, we would soon deplete the resource and the effectiveness
could not be controlled – besides which, the plant may not be
producing the chemical at the time we pick it. In the lab, we can control
the conditions in order to more conclusively investigate what conditions
trigger a plant to produce the protective chemicals.”
By relying on the technical capabilities of Lila’s lab at the
U of I and her colleagues at Rutgers, the mysteries of the Uzbekistan
and Kyrgyzstan plants can be unlocked so that these countries will be
able to take it to the next level – from anecdotal evidence to
reliable scientific data and ultimately to a drug that would be available
to the world.
One plant the project will examine works like ephedrine, but without
the problems associated with that drug. If its secret can be unlocked
and produced in a form that the public can rely upon, it may be used
to prevent fatigue, impotence and osteoporosis. Another plant, associated
with many legends and folkloric tales about its magic powers, will be
studied for its potential to have an effect on diabetes, respiratory
infections and premenstrual and postmenopausal symptoms.
The entire project will encompass 10 major therapeutic areas and close
to 60 disease specific targets in humans. Some of these include heart
and gastric diseases, cancer, functional disturbances of the central
nervous system, anemia, blood disorders, diabetes, gynecological disorders
and skin diseases.
“This is not a commercial enterprise, but a gift to mankind,”
Lila said. “These countries have hidden knowledge that is not
available to the public and they are eager to have the U. S. federal
government support for this unprecedented collaboration. Most of these
plants have medicinal properties for which there are no counterparts
in synthetic medicine.”
Lila said that she and her colleagues from Rutgers were the first American
biologists to step foot into the collaborating Asian institutions, including
Samarqand University and the Kyrgyzstan Agrarian Institute. “and,
for both institutions, it was the first time that any scientist from
the West had proposed large-scale, long-term collaboration, supported
with funds from the U. S. government,” Lila said.
The National Institutes of Health, the United States Department of
Agriculture and the National Science Foundation with matching funds
provide from corporate sponsors funding for this research.
Source: Mary Ann Lila, University of Illinois
Summer 2003
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