Check out the HIV Cure Scientists just Discovered
Scientists from Australia and Britain have discovered a new method
which may help to target the HIV virus as it makes its way to infecting
cells.
Scientists from the University of New South Wales (UNSW) in
Australia, led by Associate professor Till Bocking, described on Tuesday
how the HIV virus forms a protein shell called a capsid, to protect
itself from the hosts defence mechanism as it infects the nucleus of a
cell.
Using a new microscope technique developed at UNSW, the team
discovered that the HIV virus uses a molecule from the host cell to
strengthen its capsid.
"It's like a switch, when you bind this molecule, you stabilize the capsid, and release the molecule to open it up," Bocking said.
The molecule, called inositol hexakisphosphate, is abundantly
present in mammals and has been seen to make the HIV capsid much
stronger, stabilising it for 10 to 20 hours.
Because the infection process takes hours, it was crucial for
scientists to find out how the virus was keeping stable within the cell.
"The HIV capsid has been intensively studied," leader of the British research team at Cambridge, Dr Leo James said.
"But the question of how it can simultaneously be both stable
and poised to 'uncoat' has been one of the great unanswered questions in
HIV biology."
To assist in their study, the team engineered viruses with
fluorescent tags to monitor the viral capsid using fluorescence
microscopy.
"We can now see the effect of different molecules on the
capsid, and pinpoint precisely when it cracks open and begins to
collapse," Bocking said.
In the team's findings, they identify a new target for antiviral
therapy against HIV and provide a method for testing and measuring new
drugs designed to target the capsid.
While there currently no HIV therapies targeted at the HIV capsid,
it is hoped that new therapies could improve treatment with reduced
toxic effects.
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Via Xinhua