Scientists in Illinois and Pennsylvania are reporting development of a way to
make the antifreeze protein that enables billions of Canadian snow fleas to
survive frigid winter temperatures.
Their laboratory-produced first-of-a-kind
proteins could have practical uses in extending the storage life of donor organs
and tissues for human transplantation, the researchers indicate in a report
scheduled for the July 9 issue of the Journal of the American
Chemical Society.
In the study,
Stephen B. H. Kent and colleagues point out that scientists have tried for years
to decipher the molecular structure and produce from chemicals in a laboratory
the so-called "snow flea antifreeze protein (sfAFP)." Those steps are critical
for obtaining larger amounts of the protein, which exists naturally in only
minute quantities in snow fleas. The larger synthetic quantities can be used for
further research and potential medical and commercial uses, they say. Read More...