Masato Tanabe

Masato "Mas" Tanabe was a drug researcher at SRI International, where he spent 45 years studying steroid hormones, which are instrumental in combatting breast cancer and prostate cancer.[1][2]

Masato Tanabe
CitizenshipAmerican
Alma materUC Berkeley
Known forContributions to drug discovery
AwardsSRI Fellow (1984)
JPMA Distinguished Service Award (2001)
SRI Hall of Fame (2004)
Scientific career
InstitutionsSRI International
Doctoral advisorWilliam G. Dauben

Education

Tanabe graduated from the University of San Francisco in 1947 with a degree in chemistry; his thesis was "Studies in the hydroaromatic series".[3] Tanabe would go on to study under professor William G. Dauben at the University of California, Berkeley.[4]

Career

Tanabe was program manager of Steroid Chemistry group, then director of SRI's Bio-Organic Chemistry Laboratory for much of his career, and later the director of SRI's Pharmaceutical Chemistry group.[1] In 1967, he was on a team that discovered Eschenmoser-Tanabe fragmentation.[5] Much of the work was sponsored by the National Institute of Health and Schering Plough, the latter of which has at least eight patents and 30 journal articles via work sponsored at SRI.[2] Other notable accomplishments include the use of stable isotopes to study metabolism. He inserted Carbon-13 into antibiotics to demonstrate how microbes can assemble antibiotics to defend themselves, then used magnetic resonance spectroscopy to determine how the antibiotic was formed.[2]

His work resulted in the development of the steroid SR16234, which has been used to treat breast cancer.[1][6] A compound discovered in a previous contract from NIH showed potential - it acted like "anti-estrogen" in the breasts and uterus but like normal estrogen elsewhere in the body, and were thus more "tissue-selective".[2] A contract was proposed to Taiho Pharmaceutical in July 1996, and within six years and slightly under $3 million (an unusually short amount of time) two new drugs were discovered and tested on people (particularly people for which tamoxifen has failed): SR16234 and SR16287.[2] The first of those, SR16234, also inhibited the growth of blood vessels (angiogenesis) and accelerated the death of cancer cells (apoptosis) and thus was particularly well suited to be an anti-cancer drug.[2] As of August 2010, the drug had been through five Phase I and two Phase II studies,[7][8] and Phase III studies are being planned.[9]

Legacy

Tanabe was named an SRI Fellow in 1984 for his contributions to steroid hormone theraputics, and to SRI's Alumni Hall of Fame in 2004.[1]

Tanabe worked with many SRI post-doctoral and international fellows; in addition, 45 Japanese scientists studied under him at SRI in Menlo Park, California under SRI's academic exchange program. As a result, he was awarded the Japanese Pharmaceutical Society's Distinguished Service Award on March 27, 2001.[1][2] He is the first person outside Japan to receive that award.[1][2]

References

  1. "Alumni Hall of Fame 2004: Masato Tanabe". SRI International. Retrieved 2013-02-10.
  2. Nielson, Donald (2006). A Heritage of Innovation: SRI's First Half Century. Menlo Park, California: SRI International. pp. 10-. ISBN 978-0-9745208-1-0.
  3. Register, Volume 2. University of California, Berkeley. 1952.
  4. Nozoe, Tetsuo (1991-05-05). Seventy Years in Organic Chemistry. American Chemical Society. p. 144. ISBN 0841217696.
  5. Masato Tanabe, David F. Crowe and Robert L. Dehn (1967). "A novel fragmentation reaction of α,β-epoxyketones the synthesis of acetylenic ketones". Tetrahedron Letters. 8 (40): 3943–3946. doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(01)89757-4.
  6. "Novel Anti-Angiogenic Agents for Breast Cancer Therapy". California Breast Cancer Research Program. Archived from the original on 2013-04-11. Retrieved 2013-02-10.
  7. "SRI International to Advance Clinical Development of TAS-108, a Late-Stage Breast Cancer Drug" (Press release). SRI International. Retrieved 2013-02-24.
  8. "TAS-108: A Better Anti-Estrogen Drug for Treating Breast Cancer". SRI International. Archived from the original on 2013-03-04. Retrieved 2013-02-24.
  9. Buzdar, Aman U. (2005-01-15). "TAS-108: A Novel Steroidal Antiestrogen". Clinical Cancer Research. American Association for Cancer Research. 11 (2): 902–906. Retrieved 2013-02-24.
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