The University of Arizona, College of Agriculture
Competitive Agricultural Systems in a Global Economy
Specialty Products from Desert Plants
Issue
Scientists at the Office of Arid Lands Studies' Bioresources Research Facility (BRF) in the
University of
Arizona's College of Agriculture are working with other universities, with pharmaceutical
companies and with
other commercial entities to develop new biological and industrial products. The ultimate goal of
this
collaborative research program is to locate specialty chemicals in indigenous desert plants that can
be grown
as industrial cash crops. Substances active against cancer are in particular demand.
What has been done?
The BRF team selects plants, evaluates them chemically, tests products, performs biological
assays, and
determines how to grow and process plants commercially. Active compounds may be located in
the roots,
shoots, leaves, flowers or seeds of a plant. In the case of pharmaceutically active ingredients,
those showing
particular promise will progress into preclinical, then clinical testing for efficacy. In 1999, after
examining
several thousand desert plant species over the past seven years, natural products scientist Joseph
Hoffmann
and his team found two substances so promising for pharmaceutical use that the original patents
have been
formally revised and submitted as full patents for both U.S. and international coverage. One has
topical
activity against skin cancer and is now demonstrating other potential pharmaceutical uses. This
collaborative
group is now studying the impact of the other compound on the current testing model for new
anti-cancer
drugs. They are also pursuing other leads, including several more that are in the pipeline for in
vivo testing.
Impact
The material that has been pursued the most extensively over the past year resulted in a new
patent filed in
May 1999 and an international patent filed in October 1999. This research has been pursued as a
collaborative
and multi-institutional project that ultimately could have a significant impact on the treatment and
prevention
of topical tumors, as well as other biological uses. The material obtained during the latter part of
1998 for the
other lead is sufficient to initiate in vivo testing during February, 2000. This is part of an ongoing
effort to find
unique applications from desert plants with development at the same time to allow for
conservation and
maintenance of the delicate desert ecosystem.
Funding
Public Health Service Funding NIH, NCI, including cooperation with Eli Lilly and
Company; private foundation funding
Arizona Agricultural Experiment Station--Bioresources Research Facility
Contact
Joseph Hoffmann, director
Bioresources Research Facility
The University of Arizona
250 E. Valencia
Tucson, AZ 85706
Tel.: (520) 741-1691 FAX: (520) 741-1468
Email: jjhoff@ag.arizona.edu
This report is one of 29 impact statements submitted by the University
of Arizona College of Agriculture to the USDA's 1999 CSREES Science and Education
Impacts
database in Washington, D.C. An impact statement is a brief summary, in lay terms, of the
economic, environmental and/or social impact of a land-grant program. It states
accomplishments and their payoff to society.
Located at http://ag.arizona.edu/impacts/2000/desertbrf.html
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