http://www.aegis.org/news/voa/2007/VA070115.html

Young Indian-American Student Achieves Medical Breakthrough

Voice of America - January 23, 2007
Erika Celeste
Columbus, Mississippi

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What could be a life-saving breakthrough in the fight against cystic
fibrosis, cancer and AIDS has been achieved by a 17-year-old Indian-American
student at the Mississippi Institute of Mathematics and Science. Madhavi
Gavini is one of the quieter students at this prestigious boarding school.
"She doesn't stand up and raise her hand and answer questions," science
teacher Gil Katzenstein observes. "She actually likes to ask questions;
questions about things she doesn't know. She's a student in the best sense:
someone who's interested in learning and doing."

It was that thirst for knowledge that drove Madhavi to search for a way to
help a friend with cystic fibrosis. "I found out that most people who have
CF die of pseudomonas infections," she recalls, "so I wanted to see if there
was anything I could do to help." She was 14 at the time. "I guess the
thought that a 14-year-old can't really do much to help, didn't really occur
to me," she says with a shrug.

Pseudomonas bacteria -- in addition to killing people with cystic fibrosis
-- can cause deadly secondary infections in people with immune-suppressing
conditions such as AIDS, cancer and severe burns. This opportunistic
pathogen forms a thick, protective layer around itself, making it nearly
impossible for antibiotics to penetrate and destroy it.

To find a way through the bacterium's shield, the young scientist turned to
Ayurvedic medicine. Madhavi, who was born in India, spent a great deal of
time watching her grandparents, who were practitioners of the traditional
Indian healing techniques. "I grew up learning a lot of that," she recalls.
"They've used it so much that I know it has some effect. They wouldn't have
used it for centuries if it didn't. So I decided to try that approach, and
it worked."

With an herb book from her grandparents as her guide, Madhavi sampled common
grocery store and green houseplants, such as cinnamon, ginger and aloe. She
obtained a strain of pseudomonas bacteria from the local university and
began subjecting the germs to various plant extracts.

One of the common tropical plant extracts penetrated the bacterium's
protective layer. Next, Madhavi isolated the specific molecule in the
extract that was able to inhibit bacterial growth. She found that the
molecule was heat resistant, and resistant to pressure. "It kills the cell,"
she explains, "by preventing the transcription of the genes involved in
energy, metabolism, adaptation, membrane transport, and toxin secretion."

The young scientist has several ideas about how her discovery might be
applied. One is as an inhaler. "A lot of people have chronic lung
infections," she observes. "It's one of the most commonly infected sites. So
an inhaler would be able to directly deliver this drug to the lungs." She is
also considering the possibility of an antiseptic spray for open wounds and
severe burns.

Her work has already earned her several national awards, including top
honors at the 2006 Intel Science and Engineering Fair and the Siemens
Westinghouse Competition.

While Madhavi could become a millionaire by patenting her work, she has
something else in mind: making it openly available. She points out, "If I
were going to patent this, the rights would have to be sold to a
pharmaceutical company, and that would greatly increase the cost of the drug
once it's developed. So to prevent that from happening, by publishing it,
the information becomes readily available and any company that wants to
manufacture it, would be able to. So the price would be much lower due to
competition and the people who need it most will have access to it."

She suspects there are many more alternative cures waiting, perhaps in plain
sight, to be found. Teacher Gil Katzenstein is confident that if anyone can
find them, it's Madhavi Gavini. 

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