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The yeast is a single-celled fungus known as brewer's yeast
GM yeast ‘factories’ could become a cheap and productive source of the antimalarial drug artemisinin, currently in short supply.

David Byres

Yeast 'factories' could produce key malaria drug

Wagdy Sawahel

12 April 2006

EN | 中文

Genetically modified yeast could help overcome a global shortage of the most effective malaria drug, according to research published in Nature this week (13 April).

The drug's main component artemisinin is found in the sweet wormwood plant, Artemisia annua, but extracting it is costly and time consuming.

The World Health Organization recommends using artemisinin-based drugs to treat malaria, but with 300-500 million people being infected each year, suppliers are unable to meet the demand.

Now researchers have created yeast 'factories' that can make the chemical precursor of artemisinin nearly 100 times as fast as it can be extracted from plants.

The team, led by Jay Keasling of the University of California at Berkeley in the United States, did this by tweaking the yeast's genes then adding two genes from sweet wormwood to its DNA.

A "simple and inexpensive purification process" is all that is needed to extract artemisinin from the modified yeast, say the researchers.

They say their method is more reliable than plant-based methods because it is not subject to factors that such as the weather. It is also cheaper and produces a purer form of artemisinin than can be extracted from sweet wormwood.

They add, however, that more work is needed to optimise the amount of artemisinin produced.

Leann Tilley, professor of biochemistry at La Trobe University in Australia, says the work is "of major importance and very exciting."

But she adds that it is critical that the costs of the extraction and manufacturing processes are kept as low as possible to make the drug affordable to the people who need it.

A course of artemisinin-based drugs costs US$2.40 but in much of Africa, public investment in healthcare amounts to less than US$6 per person per year.

Link to full paper in Nature 

Reference: Nature 440, 940 (2006)

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