Pubdate: Mon, 03 Mar 2003 Source: Messenger-Inquirer (KY) Copyright: 2003 Messenger-Inquirer Contact: http://www.messenger-inquirer.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1285 Author: Keith Lawrence LOCAL TOBACCO TO FIGHT 'ANGEL DUST' "The devil's weed" will join the fight against "angel dust." But this time, the devil's the good guy. Large Scale Biology Corp., a California firm with biomanufacturing facilities in Owensboro, has signed an agreement with the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock to use Daviess County tobacco to produce a commercial grade intervention therapy for phencyclidine. Phencyclidine is better known as "angel dust" or PCP. Opponents once labeled tobacco "the devil's weed." Michael Owens, director of the Center for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Studies at the Arkansas university, said Large Scale had been selected to produce a potentially therapeutic antibody for PCP. "All our biomanufacturing takes place in Owensboro," Daniel J. Moriarty, Large Scale's vice president for corporate affairs, said Friday. But he said it was too soon to say when production would begin here or how much of the antibody would be produced once full production begins. "The collaborators will now begin the technical planning involved for the biomanufacturing," Moriarty said. "Right now, I believe the news is that the work of the Arkansas researchers is so promising that they have selected LSBC to enable them to move forward, beginning the process of developing an affordable drug that can someday be given to humans who might die without it." John D. Fowler, Large Scale president, called the collaboration "a major step in addressing a particularly important aspect of the national crisis of drug abuse -- the affordable development of effective therapeutics that our society can apply to a monumental public health problem." He added, "While this collaboration contributes to our corporate financial and strategic objectives, we also share the noble goal of Dr. Owens and his UAMS colleagues of saving and changing lives." The university news release says: "Under funding from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, preclinical work in animals by Dr. Owens' research team at UAMS has demonstrated that their medication may be a useful therapy for PCP abusers. "In animal models, their long-acting monoclonal antibody (Mab) medication selectively binds to PCP in the blood stream and then significantly reduces harmful effects." PCP was developed after World War I as a surgical anesthetic. It was later found to have too many side effects for safe use and was shelved until the 1960s, when it began being marketed as an animal tranquilizer. Large Scale's pharmaceutical products are grown inside tobacco plants. Once the plants are mature, the leaves are taken to the company's biomanufacturing facility at MidAmerica Airpark, ground by machinery to rupture the cells and release the product in a liquid that runs through more than two miles of pipes into huge tanks for further processing. The company says it can process 6,000 pounds of tobacco an hour and 20 gallons of pharmaceuticals a minute. Large Scale is already conducting clinical trials on a vaccine for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and is expanding its Owensboro production to include vaccines for AIDS and cervical cancer, enzymes to fight plant disease and a protein to protect human tissue against damage from chemotherapy. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom