United States pharmaceutical companies are inadvertently creating tens of
thousands of poisonous new compounds each year that terrorists or rogue nations
could develop into chemical weapons, according to a California researcher.
These unintended toxins arise from the drug industry's automated
high-throughput technology that permits millions of new compounds to be created
and tested, and those found to be toxic to humans, simply discarded, said
Mark
Wheelis, director of the Program in Nature and Culture at the University of
California, Davis.
"Currently, a single [facility] can screen several hundred thousand new
compounds per day against several dozen different proteins," Wheelis said. Of
three million new compounds created each year, on the order of 50,000 are highly
toxic, he explained. "Any one of these is a potential lethal chemical weapon
agent."
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is also concerned about
these and many other products of the biotechnology revolution that have dual
helpful and harmful uses, noted
Tamas
Bartfai, professor of neuropharmacology at the Scripps Research Institute.
Last September ICRC issued an
appeal "to governments and pharma companies that they should
start to think about guarding what they do," he said.
Experts disagree about how easy it would be to steal databases of unintended
toxic drugs. As trade secrets, "It would be tough for [bad guys] to get access
to it," said
Steven Block, professor of applied physics and biological sciences at
Stanford University.
Bartfai strongly disagreed. "Of the toxic ones today, nobody keeps track,
just nobody." The best example, he said, is angel dust, the illegal drug PCP.
That was inadvertently made during a drug company's research into glutamate
receptor ligands, he said. Discarded because of its psychomotor side effects, it
was left unguarded, and it's been sold on the street ever since.
Wheelis acknowledges his critics' point that considerable research would
still be required to turn inadvertently-manufactured poisonous chemicals into
effective, deliverable weapons. He is much less concerned about the 50,000
annual pharma industry toxins than he is about a
government using its own screening machinery to develop
poisons from scratch.
Matthew Meselson, Thomas Dudley Cabot Professor of the natural sciences at
Harvard University, believes that unintended poisons pose no threat whatsoever.
Publicly available chemical databases already describe thousands of
easier-to-develop toxins, he said, so why should wrongdoers look any further?
Enemies needn't bother with new toxins because we can't even protect
ourselves against old ones, added
Block.
"As things stand," he said, "we don't have good antidotes or ways of dealing
with the toxins that we already know about."
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