Claims
- 1. An isolated substantially pure biological material optionally associated with a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof which has the following characteristics:
(a) has a constant hydrodynamic radius of about 0.3 to 0.40 μm, having a low poly-dispersity index of about 0.05 to about 0.08%; (b) has an aggregate of monomeric units in saline solution, containing from about 68 to 75 monomers in the aggregate; (c) the aggregate has a number molecular weight of about 130,000 to about 150,000 daltons; (d) the monomer has a molecular weight of about 1,900 to about 2,000 daltons; (e) contains two sugar amine moieties, wherein the sugar is glucose or galactose, provided one of the sugars is glucose; (f) contains no pyrophosphate groups; (g) contains 1,6 β-linkage between the two sugars; (h) the monomer contains no phosphate group or may contain a phosphate at the 1 position or the 4′ position of the sugar; however, the aggregate contains at least 80% by weight a sugar moiety which does not have any phosphate thereon, and at most 20% by weight a sugar moiety having a mono phosphate; (i) contains an amino functionality at the 2 and 2′ positions which may form amide bonds with a 3-hydroxytetradecanoic acid; (j) contains an hydroxy functionality at the 3 and 3′ position which may be esterified with hydroxytetradecanoic acid; (k) contains an even number of 3′-hydroxytetradecanoic acids per monomer; and (l) has the X-ray diffraction pattern of FIG. 8A at 25° C.
- 2. A non-toxic biological material prepared by
(a) collecting an endotoxin extract derived from Enterobacteriaceae at the situs of infection in a patient; (b) screening and collecting those enterobacteria which produce colicin but which do not convert tryptophan into indole and which do not react in the MUG assay; (c) harvesting those selected bacteria; (d) selecting those strains of step (c) which cannot make endotoxins; and (e) killing the strains of step (d)
- 3. The non-toxic biological material of claim 2 in which step (e) comprises heating the strains of (d) at sufficient temperatures to denature the protein therein.
- 4. The non-toxic biological material according to claim 2 which is prepared by additionally extracting from the product of step (e) the lipid material exhibiting absorbances at 230 nm and 550 nm.
- 5. The non-toxic biological material according to claim 4 in which extracting comprises precipitating the lipid material with chloroforml/methanol or acetonitrile/methanol solution and purifying the product and lyophilizing same.
- 6. The non-toxic biological material according to claim 4 in which extracting comprises placing the lipid material in an aqueous saline solution, purifying the crude lipid product by chromatography, collecting those fractions which have a UV absorption at about 230 and 550 nm, lyophilizing the collected fractions and precipitating the desired product with CHCl3/MeOH or CH3CN/MeOH and purifying the precipitated product.
- 7. The non-toxic biological material of claim 4 which has a monomer molecular weight of about 1900 daltons and an aggregate molecular weight in saline solution ranging from about 120,000 to about 150,000 daltons.
- 8. The non-toxic biological material of claim 2 placed in aqueous solution.
- 9. The non-toxic biological material according to claim 2 wherein the enterobacteriaceae is aerobic enterobacteriaceae.
- 10. The non-toxic biological material according to claim 2 in which the enterobacteriaceae is in the R. form.
- 11. The non-toxic biological material according to claim 2 in which the enterobacteriaceae is in the S form.
- 12. The non-toxic biological material according to claim 11 in which the enterobacteriaceae belongs to the strain selected from the group consisting of Bacillus, Bacterioides, Brucella, Carnobacterium, Caulobacter, Citrobacter, Clostridium, Corynebacterium, Enterobacter, Escherichia coli, Halobacteria, Klebsiella, Lactobacillus, Lactococcus, Leuconstoc, Listeria, Micrococcus, Mycobacterium, Neisseria, Pasteurella, Pedioccoccus, Propionibacterium, Proteus, Pseudomonas, Salmonella, Sarzina, Shigella, Serratia, Staphylococcus, Sreptococcus, and Vibrio.
- 13. A colloid crystal of the biological material of claim 1 or 2.
- 14. A pharmaceutical composition comprising a pharmaceutically effective amount of the biological material of claim 1 or 2 in association with a pharmaceutical carrier.
- 15. The pharmaceutical composition according to claim 14 further comprising calcium, magnesium and zinc salts.
- 16. The pharmaceutical composition according to claim 14 in which the salts are ZnCl2, Zn-D-gluconate, Zn-maglumine, Zn-D-citrate or Zn-salicylate.
- 17. The pharmaceutical composition according to claim 14 in the form of a liposome.
- 18. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 14 wherein the composition is in a lyophilized form.
- 19. The pharmaceutical composition according to claim 14 in the form of an oil drop emulsion.
- 20. A method for imparting immunotherapy to a disease in a mammal which is afflicted with a viral or bacterial infection, said method comprising administering to a mammal in need thereof in effective amount of the product of claim 1 or 2.
- 21. The isolated product of claim 2.
- 22. An isolated microorganism having the following attributes:
(a) is an enterobacteria; (b) produces colicin; (c) does not form any endotoxin; (d) does not possess genes responsible for making verotoxins; (e) does not contain activation factors for CAMP adenylate cyclase; (f) does not contain activation factors for cGMPM guanylate cyclose; (g) does not have adhesion molecules; (h) does not have eaegene sequence; (i) undergoes the indole and mug assay; and (j) is rod-like in appearance.
- 23. A substantially pure strain of the microorganism of claim 21 or claim 22.
- 24. An isolated host cell containing therein the product of claim 1.
- 25. An isolated host cell containing therein the biological material of claim 2 or 4.
- 26. The substantially pure product of claim 1 or claim 4.
- 27. A vaccine comprising the biological material of claim 1 or 2.
- 28. A method of treating bacterial and viral infections in humans in need of such treatment comprising administering thereto a pharmaceutically effective amount of the biological material of claim 1 or 2.
- 29. A mixture of first and second compound of the formula:
- 30. The mixture of claim 29 wherein the weight ratio is about 80:20.
- 31. The mixture of claim 29 wherein chiral centers therein identified with an * are in the R configuration.
- 32. The mixture of claim 29 wherein a third compound is present having the formula:
- 33. A mixture of first and second compound of the formula:
- 34. The mixture of claim 33 wherein the weight ratio is about 80:20.
- 35. The mixture of claim 33 wherein chiral centers therein identified with an * are in the R configuration.
- 36. The mixture of claim 33 wherein a third compound is present having the formula:
- 37. A mixture of first and second compound of the formula:
- 38. The mixture of claim 37 wherein the weight ratio is about 80:20.
- 39. The mixture of claim 37 wherein chiral centers therein identified with an * are in the R configuration.
- 40. The mixture of claim 37 wherein a third compound is present having the formula:
- 41. A mixture of first and second compound of the formula:
- 42. The mixture of claim 41 wherein the weight ratio is about 80:20.
- 43. The mixture of claim 41 wherein chiral centers therein identified with an * are in the R configuration.
- 44. The mixture of claim 41 wherein a third compound is present having the formula:
- 45. A method for preparing a Kyberdrug from a patient suffering from acute or chronic infections of bacterial or viral origin in which there is a bacterial infection, which comprises:
(a) collecting an endotoxin extract derived from Enterobacteriaceae at the situs of infection in said patient; (b) screening and collecting those enterobacteria which produce colicin but which do not convert tryptophan into indole and which do not react in the MUG assay; (c) harvesting those selected bacteria; (d) selecting those strains of step (c) which cannot make endotoxins; and (e) killing the strains of step (d).
- 46. The method according to claim 45 wherein killing the bacteria comprises heating the strain of step (d) at sufficient temperature to denature the protein therein.
- 47. A method for preparing a Kyberdrug which comprises:
(a) collecting an endotoxin extract derived from Enterobacteriaceae at the situs of infection in said patient; (b) screening and collecting those enterobacteria which produce colicin but which do not convert tryptophan into indole and which do not react in the MUG assay; (c) harvesting those selected bacteria; (d) selecting those strains of step (c) which cannot make endotoxins; (e) killing the strains of step (d); and (f) extracting from the product of step (e) to lipid material exhibiting absorbances at 230 nm and 550 nm.
- 48. The method according to claim 47 wherein extracting comprises precipitating the lipid material with chloroform/methanol or acetonitrile/methanol solution and lyophilizing the product thereof.
- 49. The method according to claim 48 wherein the precipitated material is purified before lyophilizing.
- 50. The method according to claim 46 wherein extracting comprises:
placing the lipid material in a saline solution, purifying the lipid material by chromatography and collecting and pooling those fractions which have a UV absorption at about 230 nm and 550 nm and lyophilizing the pooled fractions; precipitating the desired product with CHCl3/MeOH or CH3CN/MeOH solution, and purifying the precipitated product.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] The present application is claiming priority of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/238,656, filed Oct. 6, 2000 and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/263,494, filed Jan. 23, 2001.
Provisional Applications (2)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60238656 |
Oct 2000 |
US |
|
60263494 |
Jan 2001 |
US |