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Tunicate Treatment
03 June 2015

Tunicate Treatment

The Caribbean mangrove tunicate (a type of sea squirt, pictured) produces a promising anti-cancer compound known as ET-743. Researchers have long suspected that it's not the tunicate itself that produces the molecule, but a microorganism living on it. Now, scientists have sequenced for the first time the genome of the microorganism – a bacterium – that produces ET-743. An analysis of its genome suggests that the bacterium belongs to an entirely new family, as yet unidentified. In the wild, the active ingredient is thought to be essential to the sea squirt by making it taste horrible, reducing predation. The goal now is to culture the bacterium in the lab without the sea squirt. ET-743 is clinically approved in Europe and is in phase III clinical trials in the United States. Studies such as this highlight the medical importance of bacteria, the vast majority of which remain unstudied.

Written by Nick Kennedy

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BPoD stands for Biomedical Picture of the Day. Managed by the MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences until Jul 2023, it is now run independently by a dedicated team of scientists and writers. The website aims to engage everyone, young and old, in the wonders of biology, and its influence on medicine. The ever-growing archive of more than 4000 research images documents over a decade of progress. Explore the collection and see what you discover. Images are kindly provided for inclusion on this website through the generosity of scientists across the globe.

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