Unlocking the opium poppy's biggest secret (w/ Video)

March 14, 2010
Unlocking the opium poppy's biggest secret

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This is researcher Jillian Hagel with opium poppy research plants at the University of Calgary. Credit: Ken Bendiktsen, University of Calgary

Researchers at the University of Calgary have discovered the unique genes that allow the opium poppy to make codeine and morphine, thus opening doors to alternate methods of producing these effective painkillers either by manufacturing them in a lab or controlling the production of these compounds in the plant.

"The enzymes encoded by these two genes have eluded plant biochemists for a half-century," says Peter Facchini, professor in the Department of Biological Sciences, who has dedicated his career to studying the unique properties of the opium poppy. "In finding not only the enzymes but also the genes, we've made a major step forward. It's equivalent in finding a gene involved in cancer or other genetic disorders."

The researchers' findings will be published in a paper entitled Dioxygenases catalyze the O-demethylation steps of morphine in opium poppy, appearing in the on-line edition of Nature on Sun., Mar. 14.

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Researchers at the University of Calgary have discovered the unique genes that allow the opium poppy to make codeine and morphine, opening the door to alternate methods of producing these effective painkillers either by manufacturing them in a lab or controlling the production of these compounds in the plant. Credit: Leanne Yohemas, University of Calgary

is by far the most widely used opiate in the world and one of the most commonly used painkillers. Codeine can be extracted directly from the plant, most codeine is synthesized from the much more abundant morphine found in opium poppy. Codeine is converted by an enzyme in the liver to morphine, which is the active analgesic and a naturally occurring compound in humans. Canadians spend more than $100 million every year on codeine-containing pharmaceutical products and are among the world's top consumers of the drug per capita. Despite this, Canada imports all of its opiates from other countries.

"With this discovery, we can potentially create plants that will stop production at codeine. We are also working toward the synthesis of codeine and other opiate drugs more efficiently and economically in controlled bioprocessing facilities," says Facchini. "Our discovery now makes it possible to use microorganisms to produce opiate drugs and other important pharmaceuticals." One of the next steps for the research team is using the codeine gene to produce pharmaceuticals in yeast or bacteria.

Jillian Hagel, a post-doctoral scientist in Facchini's lab, was assigned the task of finding these key genes as part of her Ph.D. research. She succeeded using leading-edge genomics techniques that helped her sort through up to 23,000 different genes and ultimately find a gene called codeine O-dementhylase (CODM) that produces the plant enzyme converting codeine into morphine.

"That was an exciting day," Hagel says of her moment of discovery. "We have found the missing pieces that were needed to understand how the opium poppy makes ."

Facchini adds: "The evolution of these two in a single plant species has had such a huge impact on humanity over the past several thousand years. Our discovery allows this unique genetic power to be harnessed in many important ways."

More information: http://www.nature.com/nchembio/index.html

Provided by University of Calgary (news : web)

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NeptuneAD
Mar 14, 2010

Rank: 4 / 5 (1)
Obviously its better if the plant can produce what you want, but I was just wondering, what is the difference between the Codeine synthesized from Morpheine and the pure Codeine, if there is any difference.
dirk_bruere
Mar 14, 2010

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OK - so where can I get a bit of "gene therapy"? :-)
Parsec
Mar 14, 2010

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The overall breakdown efficiency is about 20%, which means that morphine is about 5 times stronger gram for gram. Codeine does have a delayed time of onset because of the conversion time, otherwise the effects are exactly the same.
NeptuneAD
Mar 14, 2010

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Sorry I should've made myself clearer, I am not asking about Morphine, only if there is a difference between the Codeine that is synthesized from the Morphine in the plant and the pure Codeine from the plant.
KingDWS
Mar 14, 2010

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It is interesting to see that Canada has the highest per capita use. To get products with codiene you simply ask for them ie over the counter. No perscription required. That includes everything from tylynol to cough syrop. It is also remarkably cheap. A perscription for painkillers in Canada might cost about $1 per hundred tablets (T3's) and refilling that in the US was about $1 per tablet. Makes you wonder if the reason is to make things cheaper or to control the poppy trade.
kuro
Mar 14, 2010

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yay to cheaper happiness!
sender
Mar 15, 2010

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the next best thing would be seeing fungal sources of opiates, some fungi do produce sesquiterpenoids which have some nociceptive properties
Rank 4.6 /5 (9 votes)
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