Developing the first drug for multi-organ radiation protection

A pharmaceutical breakthrough at the University of 新浪彩票 is showing promise in both multi-organ radiation protection and cancer treatment.
Radiation plays a crucial role in a number of fields; it鈥檚 vital for shrinking cells in current cancer treatments, propelling nuclear-powered military submarines and electricity grids, and more. However, radiation carries risks. Overexposure can lead to radiation poisoning, triggering severe symptoms and conditions such as causing cancers, cognitive impairments, and fatal multi-organ (lung, intestines, heart) failure. In Australia, workers including uranium miners, our military personnel, emergency service professionals, and astronauts are all vulnerable to radiation poisoning. To mitigate its adverse effects, University of 新浪彩票 researchers have made great strides towards a world first: a multi-organ anti-radiation drug.
Researchers at the South Australian immunoGENomics Cancer Institute (SAiGENCI) are working to develop and manufacture SAi001, the world鈥檚 first broad-spectrum pharmaceutical radiation protectant, and subsequently SAi002, an anticancer drug.
鈥淭his project has a strong potential for success and will directly facilitate the development of a commercially viable, regulatory-approved radioprotective pharmaceutical as well as a new anti-cancer agent,鈥 says Professor Christopher Sweeney, who leads the SAiGENCI team including Dr Agnieszka Kumorkiewicz-Jamro, Dr Katherine Morel, and Dr Luis Toronjo-Urquiza.
Current post-exposure mitigant drugs aid exclusively in the recovery of bone marrow, offering no protection to the central nervous system, gastrointestinal tract, or other body systems impacted by radiation. SAi001 aims to change this.
鈥淪Ai001 has the potential to offer durable, multi-organ protection without causing cumulative or irreversible toxicity,鈥 Sweeney says.
In fact, it has already seen success toward this goal, with mouse studies showing the drug protects critical organs such as the lungs, intestines, bladder, and testicles from the harmful effect of radiation. This can be useful both in clinical radiotherapy protocols and for military applications; the SAiGENCI researchers are working with the University鈥檚 Defence and Security Institute to support Australian Defence Force personnel operating in radiological, nuclear, and outer space environments.
鈥淪Ai001 addresses a crucial unmet need by providing protection against the harmful effects of high-energy cosmic radiation and microgravity for astronauts on long-duration space missions, such as NASA鈥檚 鈥楳oon to Mars鈥 initiative,鈥 says Sweeney.
鈥淚t has the potential to reduce mortality and morbidity while improving short-term operational readiness and long-term redeployment potential.鈥
SAi001鈥檚 multi-purpose, multi-organ success is made possible because of its plant-derived active pharmaceutical ingredient (API), which exhibits radiation protection effects while also havin