Pubdate: Wed, 26 Nov 2003
Source: Reuters (Wire)
Copyright: 2003 Reuters Limited
Author: Patricia Reaney
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy)

PROTEIN LINKED TO LETHAL SIDE EFFECT OF ECSTASY

(Reuters) - Scientists in the United States have identified a key protein 
involved in one of the most lethal side effects of the popular but illegal 
drug ecstasy.

Most ecstasy-related deaths are caused by an increase in body temperature, 
or hyperthermia, which leads to organ failure.

Researchers at Ohio Northern University and the National Institutes of 
Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland have discovered that mice lacking a 
protein called UCP-3 manage to stay cool even after they were injected with 
the drug which is known chemically as MDMA.

"UCP-3 protein is involved in the thermogenesis induced by ecstasy," Jon 
Sprague, a pharmacologist at Ohio Northern University, said in an interview.

Knowing what the protein does opens up therapeutic options and could help 
to explain why some people who take ecstasy get very hot and others don't, 
he added.

Sprague, Edward Mills at the NIH and their colleagues, who reported their 
finding in the science journal Nature on Wednesday, believe that the 
finding could lead to a way to deactivate the protein and prevent the body 
from overheating.

"We are currently looking at what drugs could be used that have potential 
therapeutic options in treating that hyperthermia based on the protein 
involved," Sprague explained.

How MDMA, which is popular at all-night dance parties and is said to 
heighten awareness, intensify emotion and make people feel good, induces 
hyperthermia or why some people react differently than others, is unknown.

Most deaths linked to the drug result from the body overheating which leads 
to the breakdown of skeletal muscle and the failure of the kidneys and 
other organs.

"The drug causes the hyperthermia and then you couple it with the fact that 
it is involved in this dance culture -- that is why you see the problems 
you see," Sprague explained.

UCP-3 is found in skeletal muscle, which the researchers say may play a 
role in regulating body temperature.

If a drug is found or developed which can interfere with the protein, 
Sprague said it could potentially be given to reduce the very high body 
temperatures caused by using the drug.

The use of ecstasy had increased by 70 percent between 1995 and 2000, 
according to a United Nations report. Ecstasy and amphetamines have 
overtaken heroin and cocaine as the fastest growing global narcotics menace. 
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake