Mycophenolic acid was discovered by Italian medical scientist
Bartolomeo Gosio. Gosio collected a fungus from spoiled corn and named it
Penicillium glaucum. (The species is now called
P. brevicompactum.) In 1893 he found that the fungus had antibacterial activity. In 1896 he isolated crystals of the compound, which he successfully demonstrated as the active antibacterial compound against the
anthrax bacterium. It was rediscovered by two American scientists C.L. Alsberg and O.M. Black in 1912, and given the name mycophenolic acid. The compound was eventually demonstrated to have antiviral, antifungal, antibacterial, anticancer, and antipsoriasis activities. Although it is not commercialised as antibiotic due to its adverse effects, its modified compound (ester derivative) is an approved
immunosuppressant drug in kidney, heart, and liver transplantations, and is marketed under the brands Cellcept (mycophenolate mofetil by
Roche) and Myfortic (mycophenolate sodium by
Novartis). Cellcept was developed by a South African geneticist
Anthony Allison and his wife Elsie M. Eugui. In the 1970s while working at the
Medical Research Council, Allison investigated the biochemical causes of immune deficiency in children. He discovered the metabolic pathway involving an enzyme,
inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase, which is responsible for undesirable immune response in
autoimmune diseases, as well as for
immune rejection in
organ transplantation. He conceived an idea that if a molecule that could block the enzyme is discovered, it could become an immunosuppressive drug that could be used for autoimmune diseases and in organ transplantation. In 1981 he decided to go for drug discovery and approached several pharmaceutical companies, which turned him down one by one as he had no primary knowledge of drug research. However,
Syntex liked his plans and asked him to join the company with his wife. He became vice president for the research. In one of their experiments the Allisons used an antibacterial compound, mycophenolate mofetil, which was abandoned in clinical use due to its adverse effects. They discovered that the compound had immunosuppressive activity. They synthesised a chemical variant for increased activity and reduced adverse effects. They subsequently demonstrated that it was useful in organ transplantation in experimental rats. After successful clinical trials, the compound was approved for use in
kidney transplant by the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration on 3 May 1995, and was sold under the brand name Cellcept. It was approved for use in the European Union in February 1996. ==Names==